In all, the Asian Development Bank, owned by 68 member countries, committed a total of $3.88 billion, including sovereign loans and co-financing during the year ended December 2018.
ADB committed to provide $3 billion in sovereign loans to India in 2018, the highest level of assistance since sovereign operations began in the country in 1986, said the annual report of multilateral lending agency.
In all, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), owned by 68 member countries, committed a total of $3.88 billion, including sovereign loans and co-financing during the year ended December 2018.
The demand for ADB assistance continued to grow in 2018. New commitments included $21.6 billion in loans, grants and investments from ADB’s own resources, exceeding the target of $19.71 billion and up 10 percent from 2017, said the report released on April 16.
Private sector operations reached $3.14 billion, a 37 percent increase from 2017, which is 14.5 percent of ADB’s overall commitment.
ADB also successfully mobilised $14 billion in co-financing from bilateral and multilateral agencies and other financing partners, including $7.17 billion in co-financing from ADB’s private sector operations.
“In India, ADB committed $3 billion in sovereign loans in 2018, the highest level of assistance since sovereign operations began in the country,” the report said.
The Manila-headquartered ADB committed several projects in India, including in Bihar, Himachal Pradesh, Madhya Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Assam and Odisha.
The report also noted that in India, ADB provided a $100-million loan to Ostro Kutch Wind, a renewable energy company owned by investment funds under the management of Actis Capital, for constructing and operating a 250-megawatt wind power project in Gujarat.
Among others, it also provided $30 million in equity and $20 million in debt security to Annapurna Finance, a microfinance company.
In March 2018, ADB signed a cooperation arrangement with the International Solar Alliance, headquartered in India, to promote solar energy deployment across Asia and the Pacific, particularly in South Asia.
The arrangement includes support for solar power generation, solar-based minigrids, and transmission systems for integrating solar energy into grids.
The alliance’s major objectives include global deployment of over 1,000 gigawatt of solar generation capacity and investment of over $1 trillion into solar energy by 2030.
“ADB continued to deliver on its climate commitments in 2018 with $3.6 billion in financing approved.
“ADB is on target to double its annual climate financing to $6 billion in approvals by 2020,” the report said.
ADB was established in 1966.