GLOBAL GATEWAY PROJECT - INTERNATIONAL

News: Global Gateway unlocks new funding

 

What's in the news?

       On the sidelines of this week's Italy-Africa Summit, the European Commission (EC) and the African Development Bank Group have formalised a new Financial Framework Partnership Agreement to boost investments in infrastructure projects in Africa

 

Key takeaways:

       The European Commission recently unveiled the Global Gateway initiative, aiming to raise €300 billion by 2027 for infrastructure investment globally, both from public and private sources.

       While not explicitly mentioning China, many view this initiative as a strategic move in response to China’s Belt and Road strategy.

 

Global Gateway Plan:

       It is an international infrastructure plan of European Union.

 

Aim:

       The plan aims to invest €300 billion ($340 billion) globally in infrastructure, digital and climate projects by 2027.

 

Objective:

       It plans to boost smart, clean and secure links in digital, energy and transport sectors and to strengthen health, education and research systems across the world.

       The investment will be made in projects that can be delivered with high standards, good governance, transparency while ensuring financial sustainability at the same time.

 

Finance:

       The Global Gateway will be delivered through a Team Europe approach, which brings together the EU and EU Member States with their financial and development institutions, including the European Investment Bank (EIB) and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD).

       It also seeks to mobilise the private sector in order to leverage investments for a transformational impact.

 

Go back to basics:

China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI):

       The BRI project was launched in 2013, it broadly aims to facilitate cross-border transportation of goods, access to energy, creating demand for existing excess capacity in Chinese industries.

       It aims to develop land and sea infrastructure to better connect China to Asia, Europe and Africa for trade and development, and it has found many partners around the world.

       China had an overall exposure of investment of around USD 750 billion between 2013 to mid-2020.

 

Issue:

       China argues that it respects its partners’ sovereignty while providing loans that benefit joint projects, while critics say Beijing’s contractual terms ignore abuses of human, labour and environmental rights.