EFTA00644276.pdf
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Date: Wed, 17 Apr 2013 18:52:00 +0000
Mobilizing Private Investment for a Brighter Future in Cote d'Ivotre
April 17, 2013-It's noon in Abidjan and traffic is crawling along Boulevard Charles de Gaulle. As C6te d'Ivoire emerges from
a 10-year civil conflict, its largest city of more than four million inhabitants is practically bursting at the seams. As the country
focuses on rebuilding, addressing infrastructure in Abidjan and beyond is a top priority of the government. "We used to have
an extensive and modem road network," says Patrick Achi, Minister of Economic Infrastructure. "But the network has suffered
from a lack of maintenance and now we have a lot of catching up to do. Not only in repairing our road network, but also
addressing our water and electricity supply. This is essential to people's daily lives."
Abidjan's traffic problems are compounded by its physical geography: the city stands in the Ebrie Lagoon, on several
converging peninsulas and islands. The two bridges connecting these land masses are insufficient and in desperate need of
repair. In 1996, a competitive bidding process was held to build a third bridge, but a coup d'etat and ensuing civil war put the
planned public-private partnership on hold for more than 15 years. Nevertheless, SOCOPRIM, the project enterprise that was
formed in 1997 to build the bridge, and its investors remained committed to the project. Fast-forward to 2013, and the location
of the planned Henri Konan Bedie toll bridge is a bustling construction site where everyone is focused on meeting the targeted
opening date of December 22, 2014.
The bridge will span 1.5 kilometers and the concrete components weighing 100 tons each will be delicately assembled one by
one. Every element will be built in C0te d'Ivoire—the construction site also functions as a factory where 800 workers will be
employed at its peak.
This is emblematic of the transformation that this once war-tom country is experiencing. The govemment and people are
anxious to move forward and have embraced private sector investment in infrastructure as essential to putting the country on
a path to prosperity. "We don't just say that the private sector is the engine for growth and sustainable development," says
Achi. "We really believe it and we act on it."
The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), the World Bank Group's political risk insurance arm, is playing a
significant role in mobilizing the massive amount of private sector investment that is needed to help the government reach its
ambitious goals. Together, MIGA's guarantees of $698 million in support of three large transformational infrastructure projects
are mobilizing more than $2 billion in foreign direct investment. Supporting investments into fragile and conflict-affected
economies is a strategic priority for MIGA. The Agency recently announced the establishment of the Conflict-Affected and
Fragile Economies Facility, which will allow MIGA to strengthen its commitment to this work.
In addition to the new bridge, MIGA is providing guarantees for two investments to meet the country's growing demand for
energy. The government is aiming to boost electricity output by around 80 percent over the next six years. Even considering
the recent conflict, C6te d'Ivoire's power sector has a solid track record by regional standards and already exports electricity to
several neighboring countries. The Azito thermal power plant was commissioned in 2000 and provides the state power utility
with more than a third of its electricity. This independent power producer continued to deliver electricity throughout the crisis,
and at times, employees guarded the plant around the clock.
With financing from the International Finance Corporation and a MIGA guarantee covering equity sponsor Globeleq the
company has broken ground on a project to convert its existing simple-cycle plant to combined-cycle, increasing total capacity
from 290 to approximately 430 megawatts. This means that the company will be able to increase its output substantially
without using any additional gas. The Azito staff is visibly proud of their resilience during the crisis. "The expansion of the plant
is really a meaningful step forward for Cote d'Ivoire and its citizens" says Managing Director of Azito O&M Marc Clissen. "It
means the country is taking steps to reassert itself as a regional economic powerhouse."
Moving up the electricity supply chain, MIGA is also backing the offshore gas facility that delivers dry natural gas directly to
Cote d'Ivoire's power plants, including Azito. Foxtrot International's oil and gas production platform in the Gulf of Guinea has a
daily production capacity of between 110 and 120 million cubic feet of natural gas, more than half the national output. Foxtrot
currently operates six gas wells, and the new investments backed by MIGA will allow drilling seven new wells by the end of
2014. The company will also construct a new gas platform in its Marlin gas field, which is expected to go online in 2015.
"These investments will ensure a sustainable delivery of gas to C6te d'Ivoire's existing power plants and other facilities yet to
be built," says Foxtrot Managing Director Christian Sage.
The residents of the island of Jacqueville where part of the onshore portion of the pipeline is buried are benefitting from a
number of community development programs financed by Foxtrot International. This community is accessible only by boat and
subsists largely on coconut farming and fishing. N'DA Kouame Jean-Noel, the regional prefect, is pleased with what he sees.
"Foxtrot has made a number of investments in our community. For example, a new school has been built and construction of a
medical clinic and dispensary are under way."
Taken together, these newly mobilized investments of more than $2 billion will keep the lights on, get people to work and
school faster, generate employment, and potentially bring countless benefits through community development programs. But
perhaps more significant is the hope that they bring.
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