
Under its Facility for Euro-Mediterranean Investment and Partnership (FEMIP), the European Investment Bank (EIB), the EU's lending institution, is providing EUR 40 million to enable mostly private but also public sector industrial companies to invest in pollution abatement measures.
Geographically, the focus is on the greater Cairo and Alexandria areas, where more than 80% of the country's industry is located, although industrial pollution abatement projects can be financed throughout Egypt.
The funds, for this Egyptian Pollution Abatement Project, are advanced in the form of a global loan to the National Bank of Egypt (NBE), the country's largest commercial bank, with strong market shares and branch network. The EIB funds will subsequently be on-lent in smaller portions by the NBE directly to corporates as well as Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises (SMEs), or though other commercial banks located in Egypt. The EIB global loan benefits from a EUR 10 million interest rate subsidy from the European Commission.
The agreement was signed at the EIB headquarters in Luxembourg on 21 November 2006.
The implementation of Egyptian Pollution Abatement Project is assured by the Egyptian Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs, and namely, through its Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA) over a 5-year period from 2007-2012.
The project implementation will be supported by technical assistance grants from the FEMIP Support Fund. A first team of FEMIP-funded short-term consultants already started working with EEAA in September 2006, in a specially set-up Project Management Unit (PMU), in order to appraise technically and environmentally, as well as monitor the projects proposed for finance under this global loan. Also the Government of Finland and the National Bank of Egypt itself will be providing technical assistance support.
This FEMIP operation is a follow-up from the EUR 15 million Egyptian Pollution Abatement Project loan signed in 1996. It underpins FEMIP's ongoing interest for environmental projects in Egypt, where strong demographic and industrial development growth rates dictate strong support for environmental improvements.
Estimated at a total cost of EUR 145 million, this second Egyptian Pollution Abatement Project is financed by EIB, along with the Agence Fran÷aise de Developpement, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and the World Bank Group.
by European Investment Bank
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