World Bank-Funded $340m Rusumo Power Plant Construction to Begin

World Bank-Funded $340m Rusumo Power Plant Construction to Begin

LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – Facility at Rusumo Falls will take 3 years to complete, provide 80 MW for Burundi, Rwanda and Tanzania, according to World Bank statement. Plant will be managed by Rusumo Power Company, a utility jointly owned by the three nations African Development Bank is financing a further $121m for transmission lines that will connect power plant to national grids JV between Chinese companies CGCOC Group and Jiangxi Water & Hydropower…

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IFC and OFID Invest in Metalco to Boost Manufacturing in Zambia

IFC and OFID Invest in Metalco to Boost Manufacturing in Zambia

LUSAKA (Capital Markets in Africa) — International Finance Corporation, a member of the World Bank Group, and the OPEC Fund for International Development (OFID) today announced an investment of $10 million each in Metalco Industries Company Limited, a Zambian company that recycles metal scrap to manufacture copper cables, lead-acid batteries, aluminum sheets and utensils. Metalco will use the new capital to upgrade environmental standards, expand operations, create over 250 new jobs and support the local…

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Tanzania gets $2.4 bln infrastructure projects loan from World Bank

Tanzania gets $2.4 bln infrastructure projects loan from World Bank

DAR AS SALAAM (Capital Markets in Africa) – The World Bank will lend Tanzania $2.4 billion over the next three years to finance infrastructure projects, the bank’s president Jim Yong Kim said on Monday. Tanzania is seeking to finance for infrastructure projects as part of its plans to transforming the country into a regional transport and trade hub. “Tanzania will be able to access an estimated $2.4 billion in concessional financing, an increase of half a…

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Uganda Current-Account Gap to Widen on Projects, World Bank Says

Uganda Current-Account Gap to Widen on Projects, World Bank Says

KAMPALA (Capital Markets in Africa)- Uganda’s current-account gap could widen to between 8 percent and 10 percent of national output annually over the next two years as imports for infrastructure and oil-related projects grow, the World Bank said. The shortfall on the current account, the broadest measure of trade in goods and services, in the East African nation on the cusp of becoming an oil producer came in at 5.9 percent of gross domestic product…

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