African Development Bank Group to expand investment in Lesotho to $331 million
The African Development Bank Group (www.AfDB.org) plans to invest $331 million in key strategic sectors in Lesotho as part of its proposed Country Strategy Paper for 2025-2030 to boost economic growth and industrial competitiveness.
During an official visit to Lesotho -- the first by an African Development Bank President -- Dr. Akinwumi Adesina met with His Majesty King Letsie III to discuss strengthening development partnerships and expanding the Bank's investments in the country.
His Majesty expressed delight at the Bank President's visit, viewing the mission as a reflection of the Bank and Adesina's appreciation for Lesotho's progress in improving people's lives.
'With haste, we will ensure that the policies and incentives to accommodate the needs of and attract the private sector are in place, especially in healthcare, agriculture, and manufacturing,' the King remarked.
King Letsie said he was confident that Adesina, whom he described as a 'man of action,' would help catalyze progress on the Bank's strategic projects in Lesotho.
Adesina thanked King Letsie for his strong leadership role as the African Union Nutrition Champion since 2014, his advocacy for improved nutrition and food security on the continent -- especially for women, adolescents, and children -- and his passion for youth development.
The African Development Bank president commended His Majesty for his leadership on the King Letsie III Just Energy Transition Fund, which aims to generate approximately 200 megawatts of power through private sector investments.
He also briefed King Letsie about the Bank's new 2025-2030 Country strategy paper and planned investments of $331 million to support quality infrastructure, capacity building, energy, integration and interconnectivity, debt management and standards, and strengthening the office of the Prime Minister.
Referencing dwindling donor commitments globally, Dr. Adesina said, "Africa must prepare to engage more proactively with the private sector. Every challenge is an investor's dream. Ultimately, capital, like water, will always find a receptive place to go."
According to Adesina, the Bank has implemented 87 projects totaling $429 million since Lesotho joined the Bank in 1973.
"We have eight ongoing projects worth $60 million, and we look forward to significantly expanding our commitments," Adesina said.
The Bank's investment strategy for Lesotho will focus on several priority areas:
Energy infrastructure, including electricity transmission lines connecting Lesotho to South Africa
Agricultural development to enhance food security and rural livelihoods
Climate resilience initiatives to address environmental challenges
Digital transformation, including broadband expansion for digital financial inclusion and government service digitalization
Water resource management, building on the success of the Lesotho Lowland Rural Water Supply Project
Public financial management and debt management support
Trade competitiveness enhancements through improved grades and standards for exports
The African Development Bank-led Lesotho Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Project has delivered remarkable results: 190 kilometers of pipeline to distribution networks, water storage tanks with a total capacity of 3.48 million liters, and 166 public water points serving approximately 28,266 people across eight zones in Maseru and Berea districts.
Responding to King Letsie's request, Dr. Adesina said the Bank will prioritize investments in primary healthcare centers across Lesotho.
'We will work on an integrated project that includes components of energy, a potential multi-partner $2.3 billion water transfer project from Lesotho through South Africa to Botswana, agro-value chains, and trade facilitation in Lesotho,' Adesina said after the meeting with King Letsie III.
The Bank is expected to support Lesotho in mobilizing approximately $260 million for the integrated water transfer project, which will supply 308 million cubic meters of water for domestic, agricultural, and industrial use through a 700 km pipe system. The project has the potential to generate up to 22 MW of hydropower.
Speaking earlier, Minister of Finance and Development Planning Retselisitsoe Matlanyane indicated that as Lesotho's energy supply will exceed domestic demand by the end of 2026, the country intends to build a substation to export excess power production to South Africa. She reiterated Lesotho's commitment to private sector-friendly policies and engagement.
The minister highlighted the importance of primary healthcare and nutrition investments to help combat extreme stunting in several parts of the country.
King Letsie is the African Union-appointed African Leaders for Nutrition champion. The initiative, spearheaded by the African Development Bank and championed by African leaders, works to galvanize political will and significant investments to end malnutrition on the continent.
Dr. Adesina also met with Prime Minister Samuel Ntsokoane Matekane; and the ministers of Foreign Affairs; Agriculture, Food Security&Nutrition Natural Resources; Health; Communication, Science&Technology and Education&Training.
The Bank's delegation to Lesotho included its Executive Director for Lesotho, Dr. Nomfundo X. Ngwenya; Deputy Director General for Southern Africa, Moono Mupotola; and Senior Advisor to the President for Communication and Stakeholder Engagement, Dr. Victor Oladokun.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of African Development Bank Group (AfDB).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Zawya
6 hours ago
- Zawya
African leaders urge US to prioritise investment-driven partnerships at US-Africa Business Summit
At the 17th U.S.-Africa Business Summit held in Luanda, Angola, African leaders called on the United States to pivot from aid-based engagement to investment-led partnerships that promote human capital development, infrastructure, and economic growth across the continent. They also pressed for a review of U.S. tariffs on African exports, advocating a shift toward more equitable and transformative trade relationships. The annual summit, organised by the Corporate Council on Africa (CCA), serves as a key platform for fostering stronger U.S.-Africa business ties across critical sectors such as agribusiness, energy, healthcare, ICT, infrastructure, trade facilitation, and finance. In his opening remarks, Angola's President João Lourenço emphasized the need for a fundamental rethinking of U.S. engagement with Africa, urging American companies to seize emerging opportunities on the continent through long-term, mutually beneficial partnerships. 'It is time to replace the logic of aid with the logic of ambition and private investment,' said Lourenço. 'Africa should be seen as a credible partner—rich in potential, in need of capital and expertise, and eager to collaborate for shared prosperity.' He stressed that Africa is no longer a passive recipient of aid but a dynamic frontier of innovation and enterprise. Echoing similar sentiments, President of the African Development Bank Group, Dr. Akinwumi Adesina, called for a review of the high tariffs imposed on African exports to the U.S. 'What is needed is more trade between Africa and the U.S., not less,' Adesina said. Also speaking at the summit, John Olajide, Chairman of the Corporate Council on Africa, underscored the immense economic potential of a well-structured U.S.-Africa partnership. He called for stronger collaboration across both public and private sectors, while emphasising the importance of regional integration and infrastructure development within Africa. 'With over 2,000 participants from across Africa and the diaspora attending this summit, I'm confident that our nations are well represented. A robust U.S.-Africa business relationship can transform economies, especially as Africa brings vital assets such as critical minerals needed for green technologies,' Olajide said. He urged African leaders to harmonise visa regimes across the continent to unlock the full potential of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). He cited the challenges some African participants faced in securing entry into Angola, while their American counterparts entered with ease. 'We cannot continue to speak of economic integration while we lack easy access to one another. Until we ease visa restrictions within Africa, the goals of the AfCFTA will remain out of reach,' Olajide noted. 'Intra-African trade, cross-border collaboration, and infrastructure development all depend on seamless regional connectivity.' Representing the U.S. government, Massad Boulos, Senior Advisor for Africa, emphasized the Trump administration's commitment to moving beyond aid, toward technology-driven investments across Africa. He reiterated U.S. interest in engaging with stable African nations to foster peace and prosperity. 'President Donald Trump is committed to Africa—particularly to countries free of crisis. Lasting peace is the foundation for sustainable investment and infrastructure development,' Boulos stated. 'A peaceful African environment will unlock new opportunities for U.S. investment in the region.'


Gulf Today
4 days ago
- Gulf Today
Don't panic, there's still hope for interest rate cuts
Of all the losers from the Bank of England's decision to hold interest rates - which includes the 591,000 people currently on tracker mortgages, as well as those among the 7.1 million households on fixed rate mortgages who are scouting around for a new deal - the biggest loser of all could be one Rachel Reeves. The chancellor needs the British economy to start firing. Number 11 has very little headroom if it is to keep to Reeves' fiscal rules, which prohibit borrowing to fund day-to-day government spending, and avoid a tax-raising Budget in the autumn. Base rates at the current 4.25 per cent — described by the Bank as 'restrictive' — are throttling the growth that could ease the pressure, and provide some much needed assistance to businesses struggling under the weight of high financing costs, not to mention mortgage holders grappling with high costs. Three members of the rate-setting Monetary Policy Committee were sufficiently worried about the economy — and the prospect of inflation dipping below the Bank's 2 per cent target next year — to vote for an immediate cut. True, they were the usual suspects - dove-in-chief Swati Dhingra, an external MPC member, Alan Taylor, also an external member and the first Reeves appointment, and Dave Ramsden, one of the Bank's deputy governors. However, that all three of them combined to vote to defy market expectations and cut now, together with comments from governor Andrew Bailey after the decision was made public, have raised hopes that a cut could come in August. The City was previously betting on September as the more likely date. While even August may not come soon enough for Reeves, business groups would certainly cheer given the headaches created by higher taxes, rampant uncertainty and rising wages, especially at the bottom of the scale where those on the minimum wage have been granted a big raise. That is welcome. But we are starting to get to the level at which it's fair to at least debate how much further the floor can be raised before damaging the labour market and the wider economy, particularly given how shaky the latter currently is. Some companies have also clearly responded by squeezing those in roles that pay just above the minimum. The increase could thus be filed under the heading 'no good deed goes unpunished'. The unstable global picture, dominated by conflicts that look increasingly frightening, inevitably complicates the MPC's job. The outbreak of hostilities between Israel and Iran has already driven a sharp rise in the oil price, and a lesser, but still significant rise in natural gas prices. Pay close attention to the latter in particular, given the impact it could have on OfGem's next energy price cap, and the inflationary impact higher gas prices have caused in the past. Britain remains over-reliant on wholesale gas prices, a longstanding and vexatious problem that will not be fixed easily or quickly. The Bank said it was 'monitoring' the situation, but its rate-setters could easily find themselves caught between a rock and a hard place if the conflict damages the economy while also stoking inflation. Stagflation — a stalling economy, with high inflation and high interest rates — is the nightmare scenario. What really doesn't help matters is the unreliable data the Bank has been receiving from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), particularly the longstanding problems with its labour force survey. It also recently emerged that it got the April inflation number wrong. This represents a huge problem. If the labour market is weaker than the official numbers suggest, and wage settlements are lower, then there would be more scope to cut rates, to the economy's benefit. Recruitment firm Hays has seen its shares slump to a 14-year low as a result of a global slowdown in hiring, with its UK and Ireland division a notable weak sport. A 13 per cent decline in fees were forecast in the domestic market while the company expects a 9 per cent decline across the group as a whole. The ONS needs to fix its problems. It simply isn't good enough. As it is, the MPC is predicting a 'significant slowing' in wage settlements as a result of a looser jobs market, in which vacancies have been tumbling and unemployment rising: even though the MPC trotted out its usual line about taking a 'cautious' approach to cutting rates, while making clear that their path is not 'pre-determined', that is another hint that an August cut could be in the works. Immediate beneficiaries would be those looking to buy homes or remortgage their existing residences. Fixed-rated deals have risen recently because the markets reset their expectations of the pathway for rates. Another change in sentiment could improve deals again. Capital Economics, for one, thinks rates could fall to as low as 3.5 per cent, even with inflation not expected to move back towards the 2 per cent target until next year, with the current 3.4 per cent rate expected to peak at 37 per cent in September.


Zawya
5 days ago
- Zawya
Nigeria: How Gov Ododo is leveraging multilateral partnership to transform road infrastructure?
In a bold move to bridge the gaps in Kogi State's road infrastructure and position it as a model of sustainable development, Governor Ahmed Usman Ododo has embarked on an ambitious strategy of leveraging multilateral partnerships to revitalize rural access, enhance connectivity, reverse environmental degradation, and boost agricultural productivity anchored on local content. While the state government is currently working on over 400 kilometers of township roads, including roads in Omala, Idah, Bassa in Kogi East, Mopamuro, Egbe, Ijumu in Kogi West and Okene, Okehi, and Adavi in Kogi Central, there are currently over 200 kilometres of rural roads connecting about 50 communities across most of the agricultural belts in several local government areas in the state, largely enabled by multilateral partnerships and strategic interventions. Central to this vision of innovative multilateral partnerships is the Agro-Climatic Resilience in Semi-Arid Landscape (ACReSAL), with its unprecedented erosion control projects at Etahi in Okene, Olubiojo in Ankpa, and Omigbo in Kabba, representing Kogi Central, East, and Western Senatorial zones, respectively, worth 29.9 Billion Naira. Equally pivotal is the Rural Access and Agricultural Marketing Project (RAAMP), which has already initiated construction of over 200 kilometres of rural access roads across the state. These initiatives, implemented in collaboration with multilateral organisations such as the World Bank, African Development Bank (AfDB), and the Federal Government of Nigeria, among other donor agencies, are closely aligned with Governor Ododo's campaign promises anchored on a commitment of not only transforming Kogi's physical landscape but at the same time breathing new life into its economy by boosting agricultural output and creating jobs. RAAMP, an initiative by the World Bank, and the Federal Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, has emerged as a cornerstone of the administration's strategy to link rural and agricultural production communities with markets and essential services. In October 2024, Governor Ododo flagged off the construction of 65 kilometres of rural access roads connecting major agro-producing communities in Lokoja, Adavi and Okehi local government areas. Speaking during the flag-off ceremony at Apata, near Obajana, Governor Ododo emphasized that: 'These rural roads are not just transport links, they are lifelines that connect our traders, farmers, and communities, fostering economic growth and food security. By improving access, we are empowering farmers to compete in regional and national markets, thereby boosting incomes and reducing poverty.' The governor maintained that strategic connections to be enhanced by the project marked the beginning of a broader rural road network aimed at enhancing connectivity, lowering transportation costs for farmers, and improving access to markets. True to the governor's manifesto, which pledged to explore innovative financing models such as public-private partnerships for roads and other public infrastructure, the RAAMP initiative is a textbook example, blending international donor support with state-driven priorities to address critical infrastructure gaps in the state. While RAAMP tackles the rural connectivity challenge, ACReSAL focuses on another pressing concern: environmental degradation and the threat it poses to agricultural sustainability and peoples' wellbeing. In Etahi, Olubiojo, and Omigbo, years of unchecked seasonal erosion have carved deep gullies, devastating farmlands, and displacing communities. In response, the ongoing ACReSAL environmental remediation projects funded by its partners like the World Bank and implemented in partnership with the Federal Ministry of Environment aim to restore these landscapes through bioengineering and climate-resilient techniques. Governor Ododo harped on the significance of these projects when he noted: 'We are not only building roads and bridges; we are building trust, inclusion, and ownership by ensuring our people benefit directly from the process.' He further stated that the projects are not merely technical interventions but people-centered solutions designed for long-term impacts, as he stressed during the recent project inspection tour in Kogi Central, emphasizing that the administration has evolved a statewide scope of interventions. 'What we are doing in Kogi Central is also taking place in Kogi East and Kogi West. Our project monitoring teams are also conducting inspections in other parts of the state. We will continue to monitor, evaluate, and complete projects that matter to the people,' he said. A testament to all-inclusiveness in the development of road infrastructure in the state is visible in the several rural road projects by RAAMP including the 24.1KM Ilai-Ifeolukotun road in Yagba East local government; 19.55KM Aku-Uro-Obajana road, 6.59KM Osara-Atami road, 6.83KM Elubi-Etiaja-Ajakwu-Ulaja road in Dekina local government area, 4.13KM Odidoko-Ugbamaka-Ubojo-Oloyo-Emakpe road in Olamaboro local government area, 16.03KM Eganyi-FFN road in Ajaokuta local government area, 1.33KM EMMCO-Umuaga road in Okene local government area, 2.41KM Aku-UrukuOdoba road in Adavi local government area and the 18.95KM Ibado Akpacha-Ojiaji-Ogudu road in Omala local government area. These projects are serving as engines of economic empowerment, inclusion, and promoting local content in project delivery. Current data reveals that over 5,000 skilled and semi-skilled youths are employed across the state, from road construction sites in Obajana, Omala, and Aku to erosion control sites in Ankpa, Okene, and Kabba-Bunu. As Benjamin Oguche, a mason working on one of the ACReSAL project sites in Ankpa, shared:'I am working on the gully erosion control sites. They (the construction firm) taught us how to lay asphalt and use machinery. Now I can get similar jobs anywhere in the country.' The ripple effects are already apparent. In Etahi, ongoing construction of roads coupled with erosion control has revitalized community life almost overnight. In Olubiojo and Omigbo, ACReSAL's land restoration, now over 65% complete, has restored access to fertile lands previously lost to erosion, enabling a return to farming and food production. As these projects progress across the state, they herald a new era for Kogi. Upon completion, RAAMP's road networks will connect rural dwellers to schools, healthcare centres, and markets, while ACReSAL's restoration efforts, supported by over three billion Naira in community revolving loans as well as plans to plant trees for reforestation on 10,000 hectares of land in the state, will safeguard Kogi's agricultural productivity, the environment and the wellbeing of the people. Overall, Governor Ododo's administration is proving that strategic multilateral partnerships can turn campaign promises into tangible progress. By aligning international and national interventions with a clear, community-focused development agenda, he is not just bridging infrastructure gaps, he is building a new Kogi State where collective commitment to sustainability and shared prosperity become a reality for all.