- New multi-million programme to support green cities and
develop resilient infrastructure in lower income countries.
- Expertise and technical support from across UK government
will encourage innovation and sustainable economic growth.
- Zambia, Tanzania, and Bangladesh among the many countries to
benefit.
A new £48 million programme to improve infrastructure in lower
income countries has been set out by Minister of State for
Development and Africa at the Global Gateway Forum
in Brussels today (Wednesday 25 October).
Drawing on expertise from across the UK government and the
private sector, the £48 million Green Cities and Infrastructure
Programme (GCIP) will deliver low-carbon, climate-resilient
infrastructure, and support cities in lower income countries to
become hubs of innovation while bolstering sustainable economic
growth.
Examples include:
- In Zambia, working alongside the US and EU, the programme
will provide technical support to reduce the transportation costs
of goods through the Lobito Corridor to Angola and create new
development opportunities, for example by supporting
infrastructure for processing raw materials, including food.
- In Tanzania, it will improve waste management in Dar Es
Salaam and support the city to become more resilient to climate
shocks.
- In Bangladesh, it will improve traffic management and reduce
pollution across major cities, informed by expertise from
Transport for London.
, Minister for Development
and Africa at the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office
(FCDO), said:
By making the UK’s expertise more accessible, the Green Cities
and Infrastructure Programme will help lower income countries
close their infrastructure gaps, creating climate resilience,
supporting sustainable growth, and reducing poverty. The impact
will be transformative.
The £48 million investment is part of the UK’s contribution to
the G7’s Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment
(PGII) - a collective commitment to mobilise up to $600 billion
(ca. £495 billion) by the end of 2027 to help narrow the
infrastructure and investment gap in lower income countries.
Delivery of the GCIP will be through the FCDO’s Centre of
Expertise in Green Cities and Infrastructure, which provides
coordinated UK support for better urban planning and
climate-resilient infrastructure projects.
It will work closely with British Investment Partnerships (BIP),
which brings together all the UK government’s development and
investment offer, including development finance, export finance,
capital market mobilisation, and UK technical expertise.
This announcement comes as the UK prepares to host the UK-African
Investment Summit next year, forming part of wider plans to
strengthen UK-African partnerships to create jobs and stimulate
growth.
Notes to Editors
- The Global
Gateway Forum brings together representatives of
governments from the European Union and from around the world
with the private sector, civil society, leading thinkers,
financing institutions, and international organisations in a
two-day event in Brussels on 25 and 26 October 2023.
- The Partnership for Global Infrastructure and Investment was
agreed at the Carbis Bay Summit in June 2021 to narrow the
infrastructure investment gap in low- and middle-income
countries. The Prime Minister confirmed in May
that the UK would aim to mobilise $40 billion in financing for
sustainable infrastructure investment and economic development
by the end of 2027.
- British Investment Partnerships was launched as part of the
UK’s
International Development Strategy, published in May 2022,
to deliver honest and reliable investment, building on the UK’s
financial expertise and the strengths of the City of London,
and supporting partner countries to grow their economies
sustainably.
- The UK will host the UK-African Investment
Summit in London on 23-24 April 2024, bringing together
heads of state and government from 25 African countries with
British and African business leaders. It aims to strengthen
UK-African partnerships to create jobs and growth; support
British and African talent in sectors such as finance and
technology; and promote women entrepreneurs.