AIIB boosts common development of Asia, world
The China-sponsored Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) has approved $7.5 billion in loans to
support infrastructure projects in 13 countries of six regions, including East
Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, West Asia and Africa, driving
almost $40 billion of capital into infrastructure projects over the past three
years since its opening on Jan. 16, 2016.
To date, the new-type
multilateral development bank, with a mission to promote infrastructure connectivity,
has expanded its membership from 57 founders to 93 approved members.
In the past three years, the AIIB demonstrated internationalism,
normative operation and high standards in its governance structure, policy
standards and operation mode, winning wide recognition in the international
society.
It received the top-level rating by three major credit
rating agencies in the world, and assigned a zero-risk weighting by the Basle
Committee on Bank Supervision (BCBS), a body that serves as an influential
arbiter for the best standards in financial regulation worldwide.
As an important platform that promotes the building of
a community of shared future for mankind, the AIIB will continue to inject new
vitality to regional and common development of the world.
In December 2018, the
AIIB approved a loan of $400 million for a water supply program in Andhra
Pradesh, India, aiming to provide safe drinking water through piped water
supply to 3.3 million people in the region, where severe water pollution and
poor water purifying equipment affected people’s health.
The AIIB has approved
nine loan projects in India including the water supply program, totaling over
$2 billion. Most of these loans were used to improve the transportation,
electricity supply, water supply and other infrastructure-related areas, according
to the AIIB.
India is the largest
borrower of the AIIB, and the loans have improved the infrastructure in the
country, said Jagannath Panda, a researcher from India’s
Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses (IDSA).
He told People’s Daily that the Mumbai metro
line 4, a project that received AIIB funding, will reduce 35-percent amount of
traffic in downtown, thus greatly improving the city’s traffic.
Bangladesh is another
country that suffers from outdated infrastructure, especially power shortages.
The first loan granted
by the AIIB to Bangladesh was aimed to improve power supply for the country - a
$60-million capital that went to a greenfield 220-megawatt combined cycle power
plant in Bhola island in the Barisal district of Bangladesh. Upon completion,
the project will increase power generation by around 1,300 megawatt hours
annually.
The AIIB-funded power
upgrade project will increase power supply and improve local industrial
development and people’s livelihood in Bangladesh, where the severe power
shortage is curbing the economic growth and the progress of poverty reduction,
said Dr. Ahsan H. Mansur, Executive Director of the Policy
Research Institute of Bangladesh (PRI).
Among the AIIB-financed
projects in Indonesia, the National Slum Upgrading Project had the most
remarkable achievements, improving the livelihood for tens of millions of
impoverished residents.
The project was officially
launched by the Indonesian government in April 2016, aiming to improve the
living conditions in targeted slums via upgrading urban infrastructure such as
water supply, power supply and roads.
Two months later, the
AIIB, forming a team with the World Bank, announced $433 million of financing
for the project. Half of the capital was contributed by the China-sponsored
organization.
There are over 29 million Indonesians living in slums,
according to the estimate of George Soraya from the World Bank who is in charge
of the project.
More than 9.7 million impoverished people across the
country will directly benefit from the slum upgrading project, and millions of other
residents in Indonesia will also share the benefits.
AIIB’s first loan
project to the Philippines aims to improve flood management in selected areas
of Metro Manila. The aging drainage system in the Philippine capital was built
in the 1970s, and there always are traffic paralysis and casualties during the
typhoon season between June and October each year when floods hit the city
frequently.
According to the plan
of the AIIB, the project will upgrade 36 pumping stations and construct 20 new
ones, rebuild urban waterways, and repair garbage treatment facilities and
drainage pipelines. It will also house the relocated people.
AIIB documents show
that the project will cover 2,900 hectares, benefiting about 970,000 people from
210,000 households.
With AIIB’s loans,
Tajikistan in Central Asia has boosted key projects including a city roads and
flyovers project in its capital Duschanbe, the Dushanbe-Uzbekistan Border Road
Improvement Project and the Nurek Hydropower Rehabilitation Project.
“These projects have
directly changed the lives of local people and facilitated national
development,” said Sayfullo Safarov, first deputy director of the
Center for Strategic Studies under the President of Tajikistan.
In recent years,
Tajikistan has significantly improved its infrastructure by making use of AIIB’s
loans.
The AIIB has played an
important role in Asia’s development, Safarov said, adding that the AIIB's
projects improving the poor infrastructure are conducive to stimulating the
local development vitality.
Source: People’s Daily
AIIB boosts common development of Asia, world
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