By Faridat Salifu
The African Development Bank (AfDB) is repositioning its financing strategy to prioritise private-sector partnerships as part of efforts to accelerate green industrialisation across Africa, in a move aimed at reducing reliance on traditional public funding and unlocking large-scale climate investment.
The initiative signals a growing shift in development finance, where multilateral institutions are increasingly looking to mobilise private capital to bridge the continent’s widening climate and infrastructure financing gap.
The African Development Bank said the new approach is designed to support green industrial growth, expand clean energy investments, and promote sustainable manufacturing systems that can drive long-term economic transformation across African economies.
Rather than relying solely on government-led funding models, the bank is focusing on blended finance structures that combine public resources with private investment to de-risk projects and attract more capital into climate-related sectors.
Key priority areas include renewable energy expansion, green manufacturing, climate-smart infrastructure and industrial value chains that can support job creation while reducing carbon emissions.
The strategy also reflects increasing pressure on African countries to pursue development pathways that align economic growth with climate commitments, particularly as global financing conditions tighten and climate risks intensify.
AfDB officials say the shift is intended to create more scalable and commercially viable projects that can attract institutional investors, including pension funds, private equity firms and global impact investors.
The approach is also expected to strengthen Africa’s position in global green finance discussions, where access to affordable and predictable capital remains a major challenge for many developing economies.
Analysts note that while public funding remains important, the increasing reliance on private capital signals a structural change in how climate and industrial development projects are financed across the continent.
The AfDB’s green industrialisation agenda is expected to play a central role in shaping Africa’s long-term transition toward low-carbon and resource-efficient economies.