The African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) says it is set to inaugurate the African Energy Bank in June 2024 to mitigate the crisis in the African energy sector.
The bank disclosed this during a session on “Africa’s Energy Transition and Financing,” at the ongoing Inter-African Trade Fair (IATF) 2023 Trade Conference in Cairo, Egypt monitored by journalists.
The Energy Bank is expected to champion energy-related projects for the development of the African continent.
The initiative was conceived in 2022 when Afreximbank signed an agreement with the African Petroleum Producers Organisation (APPO).
Both parties are expected to collaborate on the establishment of an African Energy Transition Bank in support of an Africa-led energy transition strategy.
The Director of Client Relations, Afreximbank, Rene Awambeng, said that the bank had partnered with over 700 banks in Africa and its partners to chart a profitable pathway for the African Energy sector.
“In addition to what the bank is doing, with its partners, the management of Afreximbank, working on the sidelines with APPO, has decided to create another agency that will engage in financing the Energy African requirement.
“We are in the final stage of getting all the approvals and it is going to be an organisation set off by treaties.
“We will have three classes of shareholders, the first will be the African oil-producing countries, national oil companies, and African investors as well as the international investors from all walks of life.”
Awambeng said the budgeted share per capital would be five million dollars.
“There will be a process to identify these establishment agreements on the charter to engage in fundraising and commence operations by June 2024.
“The AEB will then be able to help African oil-producing member-states to take advantage of the over 125 billion barrel reserves of oil and that of the over 75 trillion cubit scuff of gas that we have on the African continent.
“This will not only help in raising the much needed foreign exchange from trading, exporting of these resources after they are transformed which again will lead to industrialisation on the continent.
“This will not only help in raising the much needed foreign exchange from trading, exporting of these resources after they are transformed which again will lead to industrialisation on the continent.”
He said the bank would be able to improve developed oil assets and develop infrastructure which was more needed in terms of refineries, logistics, pipelines, and building of storage facilities.
“This will help move the equipment and facilities in a more secure way closer to the market and equally develop the capacity building of the people in the energy sector.
“We are looking forward to this new institution as we are working tirelessly with our partners hoping to sell the gap which is glaring in the sector.”
Awambeng noted that the challenges faced in the energy sector were not new, adding that a lot of the International banks had moved away from financing projects in the sector.
According to him, the firepower is not there to meet the $80 trillion requirement from the industry.
“You see sectors like fintech are attracting more money than investment in oil and gas or energy which is critical to the industrialisation of the continent.
“We have been able to put together all the 700 commercial banks in Africa and the firepower is extremely limited.
“We have severe challenges in supporting the sector, whether in basic trade flow from a continent where we are net importers of products to fuel our industrialisation.
“Other challenges in developing upstream oil and gas projects or logistics support like pipelines, infrastructures, rehabilitation of refineries or building new refineries, and maintaining existing infrastructures around the energy value chain.”
He said the challenges were significant so there was an urgent need to work with the banks’ partners to put in place structures that would help mitigate some of these challenges and meet the requirements.
Awambeng, however, said that working with the bank’s partners which were the development financial institutions, commercial banks and corporations like Oilserv, Oando, Sahara, etc was not sufficient.
Also speaking, Chief Executive Officer, Development Reimagined, Hanna Ryder frowned at the continent’s low level of energy consumption.
“The current energy access in Africa is below 40 percent.
“It’s very bad that a large economy like Africa has less energy access. We need a significant amount of investment in infrastructure like pipelines and power plants etc, to drive the economy.
“We need Afreximbank to finance these sectors and come up with African solutions to African problems and ensure that we come out stronger than where we are at the moment,” he said.
The Chairman of Oilserv Group, Emeka Okwuosa, emphasised that development in Africa was tied to government support on harnessing its huge gas resources.
Okwuosa said Africa was sitting on huge gas resources that could catapult it beyond the limit if adequately harnessed.
“Yes, we are open to decarbonising. But for the African continent, the fastest means of growing its energy sector and infrastructure is for an intentional development of its gas infrastructure.
“That is the closest energy mix to develop the sector.”
However, he said the government had a role to play by ensuring adequate support to the energy industries by setting the right policy to drive the agenda.
“Also, Afreximbank will have to do more in ensuring the energy industries are funded adequately to drive this course,” Okwuosa said.