IFC, a member of the World Bank Group, and
Chinese multinational construction and engineering company, CITIC Construction
Co., Ltd today launched a $300 million
investment platform, CITICC (Africa) Holding Limited,to develop affordable
housing in Sub-Saharan Africa.The platform will partner
with local housing developers and provide long-term capital to develop 30,000
homes over next five years. IFC
estimates that each housing unit will create five full time jobs – resulting in
nearly 150,000 new jobs on the continent.
Rapid urbanization is
pushing up demand for housing in Sub-Saharan Africa. African cities become
home to over 40,000 people every day, many of whom find themselves without a
roof over their heads.Kenya’s housing shortage is estimated at 2 million units,
while Nigeria is in want of 17 million units. The soaring demand is being met
by scant new supply. Africa’s housing
market has few local developers with the technical and financial strength to construct large-scale projects.
The IFC-CITIC Construction platform will work with local housing companies to
develop affordable housing projects across Sub-Saharan
Africa, each ranging in size from2,000 to8,000 units. CITIC Construction has a proven track record in
constructing and delivering large scale housing projects. The platform will start by developing homes
in Kenya, Rwanda and Nigeria,
expanding to other countries as operations ramp up.
“In Angola, through planning, financing, construction and post-construction
operation, CITIC Construction has
successfully completed the 200,000 units housing program, new city of Kilamba Kiaxi, with relative
infrastructure and utilities in four years. CITIC Construction has also founded the CITIC BN Vocational School in Angola which helps youth acquire the skills they need to become professionals”, said Hong Bo, Assistant
President of CITIC Group and Chairwoman of CITIC Construction, “CITICConstruction
will take advantage of our engineering experience and delivery capability to
develop more affordable houses for Africa through the platform with IFC.”
“As Sub-Saharan Africa become more urbanized,
the private sector can help governments meet the critical need for housing”,
said OumarSeydi, IFC Director for Eastern and Southern Africa. “The platform
will help transform Africa’s housing marketsby providing high quality,
affordable homes, creating jobs, and demonstrating the viability of the sector
to local developers. IFC will work with financial institutions to support
mortgages and housing finance that will allow people to purchase the units.”
The
new housing units will be constructed in accordance to IFC’s green building
standards, delivering homes that are environmentally friendly and
sustainable.
The World Bank Group estimates that by 2030, three
billion people, or 40% of the world’s population will need new housing units.
To date, IFC has invested more than $3 billion in housing finance in over 46 countries
world-wide. IFC focuses on regions where
large portions of the population live in sub-standard housing and have limited
access to credit to build, expand, or renovate their homes.
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