ABIDJAN,
Ivory Coast, November 10, 2020/ -- Panelists at the IMC Indo-Africa
Summit called for
stronger public-private partnerships to close Africa’s
infrastructure gap and speed up intra-continental and world trade.
The
three-day event, which took place virtually from 4 to 6 November, drew
lessons from India’s public-private partnership experience, which some
speakers described as a good model for Africa.
Sanjeev Gupta,
Africa Finance Corporation Executive Director for Financial Services,
drew attention to the need to develop bankable projects to attract the
private sector.
“African governments cannot be expected, and are
indeed in no position, to take early-stage project risks, although they
should be. This risk arguably resides better with the private sector, to
better realize commercial aspirations,” Gupta said on Friday,
explaining how various fragmented systems in Africa constituted
practical challenges. In contrast, India had the benefit of being one
country with one set of challenges.
Solomon Quaynor, the African
Development Bank’s Vice President for Private Sector, Infrastructure and
Industrialization, said the Bank had created Africa50 as a key leader
for private sector-led project preparation in Africa.
“In
partnership with Africa50, we continue to innovate, including on
infrastructure asset recycling opportunities, in order to attract
later-stage private infrastructure investors into brownfield projects,
thereby releasing capital for governments to invest in new
infrastructure PPPs in their infrastructure development plans.”
He said COVID-19 recovery plans should incorporate the opportunities presented by the African Continental Free Trade Area.
Speaking
earlier, Dinesh Joshi, Chairman of the India-based IMC Chamber of
Commerce and Industry, observed that India had shown the world how a
successful PPP could be carried out in various sectors.
“India has paved the path for success,” he said.
Larsen
& Toubro Infrastructure Development CEO Shailesh Pathak told the
panel that India had made strong progress with digital infrastructure
and narrowing the digital divide, a model he proposed for Africa.
The
moderator of the panel and CEO of H-Energy Global Limited, Darshan
Hiranandani, was optimistic that India and Africa would be growth
leaders in the coming years, “and there has never been a (better) time.”
The
greatest demand was identified across power, road & rail transport,
while ICT infrastructure is on a better footing. For the Indian
economy, the infrastructure sector is also a key driver, responsible for
propelling the country’s overall development – including power,
bridges, dams, roads, and urban infrastructure development.
The
Indo-Africa Summit 2020 was organized by ABN (owners of CNBC Africa) and
the IMC Chamber of Commerce and Industry and explored bilateral
economic and business opportunities between Sub Sahara Africa and India.
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