European Investment Bank plans €700m investment in Nigeria

EU investment bank halts loans to scandal-tainted Volkswagen

epa05101450 (FILE) A file photo dated 15 December 2008 showing an exterior view of the European Bank of Investment in Luxembourg. The European Investment Bank has put on hold lending to the German carmaker Volkswagen, amid concerns that a previous loan may have played a role in its emissions scandal, the president of the European Union's lending arm Werner Hoyer says 14 January 2016. 'For many, many years we have been active in high-tech research and development with Volkswagen,' Werner Hoyer said in Brussels. 'We were astonished, disappointed and we are now concerned about the allegations, including indications by senior company executives of improper and possibly fraudulent behaviour by Volkswagen.' EPA/NICOLAS BOUVY

(FILE) A file photo dated 15 December 2008 showing an exterior view of the European Bank of Investment in Luxembourg. ‘ EPA/NICOLAS BOUVY

Ms Isabelle Grunderbeeck, the Regional Representative for West Africa of European Investment Bank (EIB), says the bank plans to invest 700 million euros in some identified projects in Nigeria.

Grunderbeeck disclosed this at the bank’s interactive meeting with its clients and other stakeholders in Abuja on Tuesday.

She said that the planned investment was in addition to the fund already committed to the Nigerian economy.

“EIB is currently identifying new projects for a total amount of 700 million euros on top of the funds already committed.

“We finance large infrastructure project, and we are also important financier of climate, we are looking into the renewable energy sector of the economy,” she said.

The official said that the bank had so far invested 296 million Euros in Small, Medium Enterprises (SMEs) in Nigeria in the last eight years.

She said that the bank had also invested 87 million euros in 65 companies through the investment funds.

“ Since 2010, EIB disbursed 296 million euros under seven facilities signed with nine Nigerian banks and 210 million euros for 50 sub-projects disbursed to be on-lent in foreign currency.

“Average allocation amount per project was 4.5 million euros.

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“It was spent on wholesale and retail trade, education, manufacturing, construction, transportation, accommodation, human health, information and communication, electricity and gas, agriculture, scientific and technical activities.

“In 2018, EIB disbursed 17 million euros equity participation in Development Bank of Nigeria funding intermediaries for on lending to Micro Small and Medium Enterprises in local currency,” she said.

The EU Ambassador to Nigeria and ECOWAS, Mr Ketil Karlsen described the bank’s investment in Nigeria as valuable addition to the existing cooperation between the EU and Nigeria.

Karlsen said that Nigeria had the largest EIB investments in the African Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries.

“With development cooperation through policy dialogue and many efforts, the biggest investment bank in the world is engaging more decisively with Nigeria; this is a wonderful progress that we are seeing now.

“If you look at the figure and the continuous engagement of the bank in Nigeria and its increasing portfolio, Nigeria is number one country in the ACP that is having the bank’s support for private businesses.

“And we are doing this in order to find a lasting solution to the migration problem in the country; the bank is creating opportunity for the youth in the country to be engaged.

“The investment will help to address the challenge of migration and to provide long term solution to the irregular migration issue, this is the best opportunity,” he said.

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