ADB to team with private sector to help achieve SDGs


FE Team | Published: May 03, 2018 18:05:46 | Updated: May 05, 2018 11:48:32


ADB to team with private sector to help achieve SDGs

Asian Development Bank (ADB) is firmly committed to partnering with the private sector to help achieve the Paris Agreement on climate change and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG).

ADB has also expressed its commitment to help improve infrastructure and expand access to finance.

ADB's private sector operations over the past year reached $2.3 billion, growing the bank's overall portfolio of private sector operations by 17 per cent to $10.9 billion, according to ADB Private Sector Operations Department's (PSOD) Development Effectiveness Report 2017.

The 27 new private sector operations committed in 2017 accounted for 13.4 per cent of overall signed regular ordinary capital resources financing.

Last year's commitments were complemented by $5.9 billion in co-financing, representing 50 per cent of all co-financing mobilised by ADB.

The report was released in Manila, Philippines at the 51st Annual Meeting of ADB's Board of Governors on Thursday.

"PSOD will continue to ambitiously work to expand its private sector operations from 13.4 per cent to 20 per cent of total commitments by 2020, including by working in new frontier markets and sectors and increasing support for high-level technologies to improve development impact," said ADB Vice-President for Private Sector and Co-financing Operations Diwakar Gupta.

ADB private sector transactions committed in 2017 are expected to create 17,000 new jobs in Asia and the Pacific, while generating more than $492 million in government revenues and enabling the procurement of $2.2 billion of goods and services from local firms, according to the ADB document.

Private sector commitments last year are also projected to improve infrastructure access and services, helping treat 750 million cubic meters of wastewater every year and generating around 7,755 gigawatt hours of electricity-enough to power 870,000 households.

Private sector operations support for financial inclusion in 2017 will result in over 11.8 million individuals and small businesses in the region having better access to finance.

Among these, 90 per cent are expected to be women or enterprises owned by women. Agribusiness projects committed last year will help more than 2,800 farming households, while over 400,000 farmers and rural households are expected to benefit from improved financial services.

Active private sector operations have already contributed to the region's economy, providing employment for an additional 133,850 people and training 308,000 beneficiaries, mostly in financial literacy.

ADB's private sector clients have also achieved carbon emissions reductions of 4.1 million tons annually.

The figures in the report are based on ADB's new performance measure of "commitments," or the amount of loans, grants, and investments signed in a given year.

This indicator was introduced in 2017 to promote project readiness at approval stage, expedite post-approval steps, and get closer to project disbursement, by placing more emphasis on when the projects are signed, rather than when they are approved by ADB's Board of Directors.

 

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