Corporate News
By OTIATO GUGUYU
America’s Overseas Private Investment Corporation
(OPIC) which mobilises private capital and invests in development
projects to advance US foreign policy is Friday set to open an office in
Nairobi, raising the Kenyan capital’s profile as a key hub for
investors seeking big-ticket infrastructure deals.
The Nairobi office will serve the East African region.
OPIC has opened two other offices in Africa during
President Barack Obama’s administration; in Abidjan, Coted’Ivoire and
Johanesburg, South Africa.
“I am thrilled to announce that we are opening a
third office in Africa to increase OPIC’s regional presence. This office
will cultivate a strong US business presence in a fast growing
investment environment,” OPIC president Elizabeth Littlefield said. This
comes just one day after China-Africa Development Fund (CADF), the
largest Chinese fund capital operating on the continent, opened an
office in Nairobi to cover the entire East African region.
The two global economic powers will be angling for
the huge infrastructure projects including the Lamu Port South Sudan and
Ethiopia Transport Corridor (Lappset).
The Americans had expressed interest in the Sh2
trillion project last year during President Obama’s visit for the Global
Entrepreneurship Summit (GES).
Part of the commercial arrangements signed between
the US and Kenya governments include an investment of $9.5 billion
(Sh950 billion) in the Lappset corridor and an additional $7.55 billion
(Sh755 billion) in the projected value of exports to flow through the
same corridor.
Treasury Cabinet Secretary Henry Rotich and US
Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker signed a memorandum which indicated
the Americans had undertaken to have OPIC invest in infrastructure
development.
“East Africa is a fast-growing region and need for
investment in power, infrastructure, water, agriculture and other
development sectors is growing,” OPIC Nairobi office Managing Director
Suresh Samuel said on the heels of the U.S.-Africa Business Forum in New
York City.
The corporation works with the US private sector,
helping American businesses gain footholds in emerging markets by
providing investors with financing, political risk insurance, and
support for private equity funds.
OPIC has already invested in the 310-megawatt
project Lake Turkana Wind Power project in northern Kenya though a
investment guarantee of up to Sh25 billion ($250 million).
It also currently has about Sh70 billion ($700 million) of active financing and political risk insurance commitments in Kenya.
OPIC is also engaged in agriculture projects across Africa as well as power generation in Nigeria.
According to the details of the US-Kenyan
agreements worth up to Sh1.2 trillion signed last year, American
businesses will also be keen on, an oil pipeline, power plants, urban
commuter rail and highways, and various projects in the health and
tourism sectors.
The massive agreements are expected to deepen Kenya-American
ties at a time when the Chinese and Japanese are flexing their financial
and diplomatic muscles which have threatened to overshadow American
interests.
About 5.6 per cent of Sub Saharan trade last year was with the US as compared to China, which made up 19.4 percent.
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