• New Energy Bank In Abuja Secures Percent Start Up Capital  – Independent Newspaper Nigeria

    New energy bank in abuja secures percent start up capital independent newspaper nigeria - nigeria newspapers online
    • 2Minutes – Read
    • 279Words (Approximately)

    ABUJA  – Dependence on fossil fuel appears not to be going anywhere anytime soon after African oil-producing nations planning to launch a $5 billion energy bank next year in Abuja secured 45% of the required startup capital.

    The bank aims to address the funding gap created by traditional investors shifting their focus from crude oil to low-carbon energy.

    According to Omar Farouk Ibrahim, Secretary General of the African Petroleum Producers Organization, Angola, Nigeria, and Ghana are among the initial backers, with the funds raised “even before” the bank’s legal establishment.

    Ibrahim disclosed this during the Angola Oil & Gas conference in Luanda, Angola’s capital.

    Advertisement

    He said: “We have come a long way. I believe we are the first development bank to progress from conceptualization to near fruition in just over two years.” 

    The African Export–Import Bank, the primary financier of the initiative, signed a memorandum of understanding with APPO in June to establish the energy bank.

    With global efforts focused on funding clean energy to achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions, African countries like Angola and the Democratic Republic of Congo may face challenges securing financing for oil projects on international capital markets.

    The resolution from oil producing countries on the continent to continue to push on with the energy bank which hope to develop more oil producing fields in the region contradicts with resolutions reached at the last Africa climate summit in Kenya which call for more taxes on carbon emitters.

    African countries torn between climate change and economic prosperity 

    Last year, a senior official from the African Finance Corporation (AFC) affirmed that the organization would continue investing in fossil fuels, despite climate change warnings from major development institutions.

    See More Stories Like This