The Board of Directors of the African Development Bank Group has approved a dual-currency Trade Finance Line of Credit for ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development (EBID) comprising $50 million and EUR 50 million. An additional co-financing of $30 million for the credit line will come through the Africa Growing Together Fund (AGTF) from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC).
EBID will use the three-and-a-half-year facility to provide direct financing to local corporates. Part of the facility will also be channelled through select local banks for on-lending to key sectors such as agriculture, infrastructure, and transport. The ultimate beneficiaries will be Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), local enterprises cooperatives and farmers in the West Africa region.
Speaking soon after the Board approval, the Deputy Director General for the West Africa Region, Joseph Ribeiro noted that regional development finance institutions like EBID are key partners of the African Development Bank and serve markets and client segments critical to the overall development of the continent.
“They play an important role in promoting trade and regional integration. This is the Bank’s first financing support to EBID, and we look forward to an even stronger partnership in the near future,” he said.
The Bank’s Head of Trade Finance, Lamin Drammeh, stressed the critical need for such support in the region. “We are excited to work with EBID to increase access to trade finance in the ECOWAS region with a special focus on the agriculture value chain, SMEs and women-owned businesses”, he said. “Regional institutions like EBID complement the Bank’s efforts to bridge the trade finance gap in Africa and serve as an effective conduit for channeling much-needed funds to underserved countries and sectors”, he added.
The African Development Bank estimates the annual trade finance gap for Africa to be around $81 billion. Compared to multinational corporates and large local corporates, SMEs and other domestic firms have greater difficulty in accessing trade finance.
About EBID:
EBID is the financial arm of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) comprising fifteen (15) Member States. Established in 1999 as a legal entity, it operates through two windows, namely private sector operations and public sector operations. Its member countries are Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Côte d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo. EBID contributes to attaining the objectives of ECOWAS by supporting infrastructure and other projects to promote regional integration.

DRC minister visited Huawei China center to boost AI training cooperation Talks focused on launch...
China says Premier Li Qiang will attend instead of President Xi Jinping The U.S. and Russia also ...
After two years of limited testing, WhatsApp will soon let users and businesses hide their phone num...
Public Eye claims over 90% of Cerelac samples in Africa contain added sugar, averaging 6 g per por...
MTN Innovation Lab hosts Africa HealthTech Export 2025 Bootcamp in Cotonou Event targets s...
Qatar’s Emir visited Rwanda and the DRC as Doha deepened its mediation role in the conflict while expanding major economic commitments in both...
China lifts its market share from 23.8% in 2016 to 52.5% in 2024, gaining 28.7 points. Imports of industrial machines more than double, rising...
The NICTBB backbone already covers 78% of Tanzania and receives 73 billion TZS (≈ USD 30 million) for its next expansion phase. Tanzania is...
Glencore’s attributable production falls to 122,000 barrels over nine months, down from 176,000 barrels in 2024. Cameroon’s government revises...
Orange Egypt and Qatar’s Qilaa International Group have partnered to develop WTOUR, a digital platform offering trip planning, hotel bookings, local...
Singita will invest $60m to build a 60-bed lodge on Santa Carolina Island and $42m in projects across the Bazaruto Archipelago. The...