‘Africa must leverage on the opportunities of the green economy’ -Tariye Gbadegesin

May 5, 2021by admin0

Leading development finance expert Tariye Gbadegesin talks to us about how to create a sustainable pathway for Africa’s infrastructure development.

Tariye Gbadegesin is managing director and chief investment officer of ARM-Harith Infrastructure Fund, one of Africa’s largest investors in infrastructure development. African Business caught up with her to find out about the fund’s current priorities and her thoughts on ESG, climate finance and Africa’s infrastructure needs.

What is the ARM-Harith Infrastructure Fund and your role in it?
We’re an infrastructure equity fund based in Lagos, Nigeria, and invest in West Africa, with some significant exposure in Nigeria given the size of the market. We are a joint venture between two institutions, ARM – one of the largest non-bank financial institutions in Nigeria managing one of the largest pension funds – and Harith General Partners, pan-African fund managers based out of South Africa. Combined their assets under management are about $3bn and both institutions have a strong track record in infrastructure.

The joint venture came out of the objective to target Nigeria and West Africa but also to channel Nigerian regional pension fund capital in addition to international capital interested in West Africa specifically. We manage capital from Nigerian pension funds as well as development finance institutions such as the African Development Bank. My role is to deal with the strategic aspects of the business ranging from development of an investible pipeline, by making those investments and positioning the fund for fundraising.

What are the main infrastructure allocation needs in Africa today?
Data that came in last year says that of the FDI that came into Africa for infrastructure about 60% went to energy and the balance went to other forms. We can see energy is by far the greatest recipient of infrastructure allocation. Energy is one of the significant gaps and over the last 10 years capital and intellectual and social resources have been applied to the energy gap.

There has been a lot of success in energy financing, which is why some African countries are at a position where from a generation standpoint there is excess supply. However, access to and delivery of power in a broad-based and equitable manner is yet to be achieved. The delivery of energy for maximum impact is still something that needs to be addressed.

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