Japan, Austria $1m for Africa climate change
Shinzo Abe, Prime Minister, Japan |
Japan and Austria have approved $1m
for the Africa private sector in the climate change battle.
The funding will be channeled to
the Africa Private Sector Assistance (FAPA) grant which aims to expand the role
of the private sector in the Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs) of
African countries. NDCs are national efforts to reduce Greenhouse Gas emissions
and form part of the Paris Agreement on climate change.
The project will be implemented
by the Climate Change and Green Growth Department of the African Development
Bank. It is intended to engage the private sector, especially SMEs, in
improving the integration of climate change measures in their investment
decisions.
The Regional Member Countries
(RMCs) selected for the implementation of the project are Egypt, Angola,
Mozambique, Morocco, Nigeria and South Africa. The project is expected to
contribute to green and inclusive economic growth in the target RMCs and
enhance the capacity of SMEs, project developers and sponsors to scale up green
investments that support NDCs. It will also help increase private sector
investments that facilitate the implementation of NDCs in target countries. The
project will address constraints to attracting climate finance, including lack
of enterprise knowledge, and insufficient capacity in preparing green bankable
projects.
FAPA is a multi-donor thematic
trust that provides grant funding for technical assistance, as part of the
Bank’s Private Sector Development Strategy. The governments of Japan and
Austria and the African Development Bank are active contributors to the fund,
which to date has provided over $68.58 million to 79 projects in 38 countries
across the African continent. The FAPA portfolio includes regional and national
projects that improve the business environment, strengthen financial systems,
build private sector infrastructure, promote trade, and the development of
micro, small and medium enterprises.
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