By Enyichukwu Enemanna
The African Development Bank will invest at least $125 million into the African Trade and Investment Development Insurance (ATIDI) to become its biggest shareholder, ramping up the use of guarantees to attract private capital, Reuters quoted AfDB President, Sidi Ould Tah as saying.
Tah, who took the leadership of Africa’s largest development lender in September 2025 is pushing a new financing model as development aid from rich countries dropped nearly a quarter last year to $174.3 billion.
The United States under Donald Trump who returned to office last year led the cuts, including to the AfDB’s concessional arm.
The investment is part of his drive, known as the New African Financial Architecture for Development (NAFAD), to tap an estimated $4 trillion in Africa’s institutional capital like pensions, sovereign wealth funds and savings schemes that is currently fragmented and uncoordinated, to plug an estimated $400 billion annual development financing gap.
“Our target is to bring the level of guarantees provided by ATIDI to 10 billion (dollars) annually and reach a target that will really unlock huge potential for financing infrastructure at scale,” Tah said after the bank’s annual meeting in Brazzaville last week.
The cash injection will take AfDB’s shareholding in the agency to 14% from 3%, he said. It has covered an average of $3 billion worth of investments annually in the past.
ATIDI, headquartered in Nairobi was set up 25 years ago to de-risk investment in Africa through insurance and guarantees that help channel private capital into riskier markets.
It is owned by 24 African states and institutional investors, including African financial firms and Germany’s KfW Development Bank, which joined in April.
The AfDB move marks a shift away from ATIDI’s traditionally dispersed ownership structure, with stakes spread across member states — led by countries such as Togo and Benin holding high‑single‑digit shares.
AfDB is urging more African countries and investors to take stakes to boost ATIDI’s capital and expand its firepower, Tah said.
“We are also talking to various financial institutions and many countries to increase their contribution or to contribute if they are not yet shareholders,” he said.





























