Building Investment Pathways in the World’s Most Neglected Markets

Courtesy of ImpactAlpha, a look at the challenge of mobilizing capital for some of the world’s most neglected markets in Africa:

“Mobilize” may be the word of the year for emerging markets investments. Africa alone needs an additional $100 billion annually for infrastructure development to meet climate and sustainable development goals. Some markets grapple with a too-slow flow of capital; others have none at all.

“It’s hard to imagine, but there are places where capital markets really don’t exist,” says Mariana Graca of the Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund, which provides debt for infrastructure projects in Africa’s least developed countries and conflict zones. 

In the Central African country of Chad, just one private-sector led, utility-scale renewable energy project is in the works – the 60-megawatt Djermaya Solar Project, which will deliver power to more than 430,000 people.

“To do a deal in Chad is a milestone. It’s very difficult to actually bring it to financial completion,” says Graca, who’s firm funded the project in 2021.

Just one startup in Chad has raised funding. Ziz Energy this week closed a €1.5 million loan from the French development agency Proparco to support development of renewable mini-grids for 500,000 people, after raising several small equity rounds.

Dealflow deserts

More than a dozen African countries have no startups with notable funding rounds, including Burundi, Eritrea, the Central African Republic, Liberia, South Sudan and Somalia. Chad, along with Mozambique, Guinea, Lesotho, Sierra Leone and Burkina Faso, have had one or two in recent years.

In Africa’s more favored markets like Kenya and Nigeria, investment managers are coming up with creative workarounds to unplug the flow of capital, including derisking mechanisms and blended finance. They’re also turning their attention to local investors, who share both risk perceptions and impact objectives. Impact Investing Ghana, Ghana’s national advisory board for impact investing, is raising a fund from local pension funds to back local fund managers. 

Such options aren’t there yet in markets like Chad, says Graca. Getting the Djermaya Solar deal done required nearly $3 million in grants for both project costs and technical assistance from EAIF’s sister companies InfraCo Africa and PIDG Technical Assistance, as well as €6.4 million in concessional debt from the EU-Africa Infrastructure Trust Fund.

“For both private and local capital, it’s a difficult market, and what’s first needed is to build confidence,” she says. That starts with a handful of pilot deals that can serve as case studies. “Then there can be a replication effect.”



This entry was posted on Friday, October 20th, 2023 at 4:40 am and is filed under Burundi, Chad, Eritrea, Guinea, Sierre Leone.  You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.  Both comments and pings are currently closed. 

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WILDCATS AND BLACK SHEEP
Wildcats & Black Sheep is a personal interest blog dedicated to the identification and evaluation of maverick investment opportunities arising in frontier - and, what some may consider to be, “rogue” or “black sheep” - markets around the world.

Focusing primarily on The New Seven Sisters - the largely state owned petroleum companies from the emerging world that have become key players in the oil & gas industry as identified by Carola Hoyos, Chief Energy Correspondent for The Financial Times - but spanning other nascent opportunities around the globe that may hold potential in the years ahead, Wildcats & Black Sheep is a place for the adventurous to contemplate & evaluate the emerging markets of tomorrow.