December 15, 2021
1 min read

AFGB approves $210mn loan to unlock Nigeria’s special agro-industrial processing zones

The African Development Bank (AfDB) has said it has approved a $210 million loan to unlock Nigeria’s agriculture sector potential and promote industrialisation through the development of strategic crops and livestock…reports Asian Lite News

In a statement on Tuesday, the bank said the loan, with $160 million directly offered by the bank and $50 million from the Africa Growing Together Fund (AGTF), will co-finance phase 1 of the Special Agro-industrial Processing Zones (SAPZ) program in Nigeria that could affect the lives of millions of people in Africa’s most populous country.

The AGTF, set up by the AfDB and the People’s Bank of China, finances eligible sovereign and non-sovereign guaranteed development projects in Africa, Xinhua news agency reported.

AFGB approves $210mn loan to unlock Nigeria’s special agro-industrial processing zones

The SAPZ program is a flagship of the bank’s Feed Africa Strategy, with plans to establish these zones in 18 African countries, including Nigeria, according the AfDB.

The AfDB’s financing for this program represents “one of the bank’s most ambitious operations in terms of scale and scope to date,” said the statement, adding phase 1 of the project will target seven Nigerian states and the country’s Federal Capital Territory and is expected to benefit about 50 million people.

“The project will support Nigeria’s efforts to raise agricultural productivity, promote investment, create wealth and jobs, and transform rural areas into corridors of economic prosperity,” said the statement.

ALSO READ: AU Chair urges support for vax, medicine manufacture in Africa

The first phase of the SAPZ program will be implemented with co-financing from other partners, including the International Fund for Agricultural Development, in the amount of $538 million, it added.

Nigerian government and the AfDB signed the SAPZ agreement in December 2019 to explore development solution in the rural landscape for agricultural transformation across the most populous African country.

Previous Story

Global Covid caseload tops 271.4 mn

Next Story

Pan African health forum opens with call for swift pandemic response

Latest from Africa News

Gates to give most of $200bn fortune to Africa

Speaking in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa, he also urged Africa’s young innovators to think about how to build Artificial Intelligence (AI) to improve healthcare on the continent Microsoft founder Bill Gates says

Civilian casualties mount in South Sudan

The fighting has uprooted some 65,000 people within South Sudan in the past three months and sent more than 100,000 others fleeing into four neighboring countries, the UN’s refugee agency said Wiyuach

Rwanda Quits Central Africa Bloc Over Congo Row

ECCAS, founded in the 1980s, aims to foster regional cooperation in areas such as security, economic integration, and conflict resolution Rwanda has announced its decision to withdraw from the Economic Community of

Wagner Mercenaries Exit Mali

Wagner’s exit marks a shift in Russia’s strategy in Africa, as Moscow transitions from relying on the private military company to deploying regular state-controlled paramilitary troops The Russia-backed Wagner Group announced Friday

180 Years of Indian Roots in Caribbean

The Indian Arrival Day is marked on 30th May, when the first ship ‘Fatel Razack’ carrying 225 Indian indentured workers reached the shores of Trinidad, then a British colony….reports Asian Lite News
Go toTop

Don't Miss

NY AG seeks to interview Trump, his children in civil case

James’ office recently subpoenaed Donald Trump and his daughter Ivanka

‘National industrial strategy reflects UAE’s vision of sustainable growth’

The UAE has become a global model for economic development,