African Green Bank Initiative: Four New Banks to Address Climate Finance Gap

Nov 30, 2023 | Ecofin Agency

(AfDB) - In a year since it was launched at COP 27, the African Green Bank Initiative has kickstarted four green banks and helped the capitalisation of Rwanda’s green investment facility as part of its mission to help Africa overcome its climate finance barriers. 

The African Development Bank (AfDB), through the African Green Bank Initiative, has kickstarted the creation of four green banks in Africa as an innovative response to the lack of climate finance made available at each successive COP meeting. Setting up green investment facilities in financial institutions in Benin, Ivory Coast, Morocco and Egypt, the initiative seeks to empower local banks with the technical capacity needed to attract climate finance from international and domestic investors. 

In May, the AfDB announced the launch of the first green banks in Africa, through a partnership with financial institutions in Ivory Coast, the National Investment Bank (BNI), and Benin, La Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations du Bénin (CDC Benin). In December, it will partner with financial institutions in Morocco and Egypt, to spearhead the launch of green banks in North Africa. 

Audrey-Cynthia Yamadjako, Coordinator at the African Green Bank Initiative, said: “The fact that African governments and financial institutions have put green banks at the top of the agenda shows that Africa is taking its climate finance needs into its own hands. By 2030, the estimated funding needed for African countries to meet their Paris Agreement Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) is approximately $2.8 trillion. We cannot wait any longer to solve the lack of climate finance in Africa”.

Despite being one of the most climate-vulnerable regions in the world, Africa receives just 3% of global climate finance. This makes the continent of over 1.4 billion people extremely vulnerable to deadly climate shocks as climate-resilient and climate-adapted projects cannot be rolled out at the pace required. 

Developed countries promised $100 billion a year to help developing nations fight climate change at COP 15 in 2009, but this finance has been anything but forthcoming. Doubts persist that the situation will change at the upcoming COP 28 in Dubai. In response to the lack of finance, the African Green Bank Initiative will roll out large numbers of green banks across the continent over the coming years...Read more on Ecofin Agency

Source: Ecofin Agency