By Bassey Udo
Pan African Multilateral Bank, African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank) has announced a major expansion of its engagement with the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), raising its regional financing limit from $3 billion to $5billion over the next four years.
The President of Afreximbank, Dr. George Elombi, announced this while addressing the 50th Regular Meeting of the Conference of Heads of Government of the CARICOM in Basseterre, St. Kitts and Nevis, on February 25.
Elombi said the enhanced commitment by the Bank builds on more than $750 million already disbursed across the region and a robust pipeline of over $2 billion in transactions currently under execution, signaling a decisive scale-up of support to governments and the private sector.
He said that the Bank’s aim in the years ahead was to significantly expand that support.
“We will, therefore, increase the global limit to this region from the current $3 billion to $5 billion, with the hope of achieving full utilisation over the next three to four years,” he announced.
Also, Dr. Elombi announced that the Bank’s vision for the next decade was to change the structure of the Bank’s economies by investing in value addition or processing of agricultural outputs and natural resources, to “retain significant value from these resources in our economies, generate wealth for our people, create jobs, and improve their livelihoods, with spillover impacts on government revenues and investments.”
The Afreximbank President said that specific interventions by the Bank would include developing healthcare facilities in Barbados, Guyana, and Grenada; supporting tourism projects in Barbados, Grenada, Bahamas, and Antigua and Barbuda; financing agro-processing projects and logistics facilities in Barbados, Guyana, Antigua and Barbuda, and St. Kitts and Nevis; and supporting infrastructure development, including power generation and distribution and road projects, conferencing facilities and trade centres, in Grenada, Jamaica, the Bahamas, and Suriname.
Other interventions include providing financing support for banks in Suriname, St Lucia, Grenada, and Dominica, including an SME-focused on-lending facility to development banks in the region; supporting local content promotion in natural resource rich countries to retain maximum value in the region by empowering local entrepreneurs to participate actively in the sectors; working on a framework for the implementation of sea and air interconnectivity within the Caribbean to boosting movement of people, goods and investments; and promoting the cultural and creative industries through expansion of the Creative Africa Nexus Programme to support financing, capacity building and trade of creative goods and services between Africa and the Caribbean.
Dr. Elombi added that following a meeting with the leadership of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, Afreximbank had agreed to support the implementation of the regional development strategy aimed at doubling the size of the region’s economy within a decade.
“That support would include investments in infrastructure development, power generation and distribution, agricultural production, and production processing,” he said.
He said that the Bank was already working with African entities, such as Access Bank, Oando and Arise Integrated Industrial Platforms (Arise IIP) in Nigeria to enable them establish their presence in the region, adding that Arise IIP was already exploring the establishment of special economic zones in a number of countries.
Dr. Elombi reaffirmed Afreximbank’s commitment to the development of the Afreximbank African Trade Centre in Bridgetown, Barbados to consolidate its presence in the region.
He added that the Bank would continue the process towards the establishment of the Caribbean Eximbank as an institution that could make the difficult investments “necessary to change the structure of our economies”.
He welcomed the decision of the Committee of CARICOM Central Bank Governors to proceed with the CARICOM Payment and Settlement System, modelled on the Pan-African Payment and Settlement System (PAPSS), which Afreximbank pioneered in 2022, describing it as a real opportunity to deepen regional trade and integration as it would be a low cost, real time cross border payment system in local currencies.
Dr. Elombi was a special guest at the meeting held under the theme: “Beyond Words: Action Today for a Thriving, Sustainable CARICOM”.
The meeting, which lasted from 24 to 27 February, also featured addresses by regional leaders, the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Dr. Carla Barnett, and the Minister of State for Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia, Mr. Adel al-Jubeir.
St Kitts and Nevis is set to host the fifth Africa-Caribbean Trade and Investment Forum (ACTIF2026) in July this year, bringing together Global Africa. It will feature panel discussions, business matchmaking sessions, cultural showcases, and deal signings.
