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Africa's Infrastructure Boost: AfDB Commits $475m to South Africa
Africa's Infrastructure Boost: AfDB Commits $475m to South Africa

Arabian Post

timea day ago

  • Business
  • Arabian Post

Africa's Infrastructure Boost: AfDB Commits $475m to South Africa

South Africa will receive a $474.6 million loan from the African Development Bank to overhaul its transport systems and energy infrastructure, the Bank announced on Tuesday. The financing, part of a broader international development package, aims to tackle persistent power outages, outdated rail networks and port congestion that have hampered economic performance. The loan is being deployed under the Infrastructure Governance and Green Growth Programme, the Bank's second phase in support of South Africa's just energy transition. It builds on a previous $300 million initiative approved in 2023, which focused on energy governance and climate resilience. The funding structure incorporates three strategic pillars: restructuring the power sector to bolster energy security, advancing the shift to a low-carbon economy, and enhancing transport efficiency—particularly through rail reforms. It also supports green industrialisation and lays the groundwork for electric vehicle manufacturing and green hydrogen production. ADVERTISEMENT Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana described the loan as pivotal. 'Our country faces the significant challenge of energy shortages, leading to loadshedding, as well as significant transport bottlenecks,' he said. 'With [AfDB's] partnership, our government has committed itself to stay the course and implement these critical reforms…while endeavouring to achieve our international commitments on climate change and our JET objectives.' This funding arrives as part of a coordinated international financing package. Alongside the AfDB loan, South Africa secured a $1.5 billion World Bank loan the previous month. Contributions also include €500 million from Germany's KfW, up to $200 million from the Japan International Cooperation Agency, and $150 million from the OPEC Fund for International Development. For over a decade, South Africa's economy has been constrained by electricity reliability issues, crumbling rail infrastructure and congested ports—challenges that have negatively impacted its mining and automotive sectors. The country's status as the continent's most industrialised economy amplifies the effects of such structural bottlenecks. The AfDB has emphasised that reforms will include energy-efficiency initiatives and rail restructuring, such as vertical separation of rail operations and improved investment frameworks. A grant component within the package supports energy efficiency and targeted reforms in the rail sector. Kennedy Mbekeani, Southern Africa's Director‑General for the Bank, said the programme is 'more than financing—it's a blueprint for Africa's energy future,' noting that South Africa's leadership in the green transition could serve as a model for other nations. Macro-economic projections suggest the just energy transition could lift GDP growth by between 0.2 and 0.4 percentage points annually between 2025 and 2030, according to the International Monetary Fund. The initiative is embedded in a comprehensive social and environmental framework. Women and youth empowerment are core to its social employment fund, with 70 percent of beneficiaries earmarked for women. Dedicated youth training programmes aim to build skills aligned with green industries. Governance reforms and green job initiatives, including skills development in renewable energy sectors, are designed to stimulate local employment and support small business involvement—especially for women-led enterprises and youth entrepreneurs. The broader global context highlights the strategic nature of this support: South Africa currently holds the G20 presidency, and its updated Nationally Determined Contributions under the Paris Agreement aim for emissions of 398–510 million tons CO₂ equivalent by 2025, reducing further to 350–420 million tons by 2030. By backing the Green Growth Programme, the AfDB and international partners are reinforcing the country's commitments across multiple United Nations Sustainable Development Goals—especially SDG 7, SDG 8, SDG 9, and SDG 13. With this tranche, total coordinated financing now reaches $2.78 billion, underscoring an intensifying global commitment to South Africa's structural economic transformation. Should the reforms in energy and transport succeed, the country could see stronger growth, reduced emissions and enhanced regional trade integration across the Southern African Development Community. Despite the promise, successful delivery remains contingent on effective implementation. Structural challenges—such as Eskom's ability to manage grid stability, avoid load‑shedding and coordinate with private sector renewable developments—will be critical. Equally, rail reforms must overcome years of underinvestment and institutional inertia within state-owned entities.

African Development Bank gives $139 mln loan to Johannesburg
African Development Bank gives $139 mln loan to Johannesburg

eNCA

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • eNCA

African Development Bank gives $139 mln loan to Johannesburg

JOHANNESBURG - The African Development Bank on Tuesday approved a $139 million loan to South Africa's financial capital to upgrade its utilities, marking its first direct lending to a sub-sovereign entity. Johannesburg is home to Africa's richest square mile but certain areas have fallen into disrepair, with the city coming under fire from President Cyril Ramaphosa as it readies to host the G20 summit in November. The loan will be used on "100 carefully selected projects" seeking to modernise electricity, water and waste infrastructure, the Ivory Coast-based bank said in a statement. It is the first time the bank, which draws most of its resources from subscriptions by member countries, was loaning a subnational entity like cities and regional authorities. "This historic transaction demonstrates the African Development Bank's commitment to supporting creditworthy cities as engines of economic growth," said AfDB's director general for Southern Africa Kennedy Mbekeani. Known as the city of gold or Jozi, Johannesburg has struggled with problems almost everywhere from burst water pipes to garbage piling up on street corners and cracked roads, a legacy of mismanagement. Annual electricity losses stood at 30 percent for the past three years while water was at more than 46 percent, the AfDB said. "Johannesburg is not just South Africa's largest city –- it contributes 16 percent to the country's GDP and serves as a gateway for investment across the continent. By strengthening its infrastructure backbone, we're investing in Africa's urban future," said Mbekeani. In March, Ramaphosa lashed out at the state of the city of six million people, describing it as "not very pleasing" and urged authorities to spruce it up ahead of the November meeting. "As South Africans we are proud people and let us get that pride to lift us up so that we do present a G20 that will wow people," he said. The new Johannesburg loan adds to another AfDB gave South Africa on Tuesday to promote energy efficiency and rail reforms worth more $474.6 million.

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