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Africa-savvy investors keen to curb risk

Johannesburg - Investors in Africa are increasingly able to see beyond negative headlines of violence in nations like South Sudan, Nigeria and Kenya, but they also seek more protection against risk for their business ventures, a senior World Bank official said.

"There was a time when Africa for many investors was just like a big, big country," Michel Wormser, vice-president and chief operating officer of the World Bank's Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), said.

"When something happened in one side of Africa, it seemed to affect perceptions of the whole continent," he told Reuters in Johannesburg on Tuesday during a visit to South Africa and Namibia.

"This is not the case today. Many investors understand the difference between countries and even understand the difference within a country between regions and sectors," he said.

The World Bank agency provides political risk insurance and credit cover for investors in developing nations often emerging from years of conflict.

Wormser said most investors in Africa now had enough sophistication to discern long-term opportunities despite a flurry of negative news, ranging from civil war in the world's newest nation, South Sudan, to bombs by suspected Islamist militants in Kenya and the abduction of more than 200 schoolgirls in Nigeria by Islamist group Boko Haram.

"There is more understanding of the riskiness and more ability from investors to distinguish between what is media hype and what is the reality on the ground, and the likeliness of their investment to yield what they expect," he added.

"Africa continues to be a land of great opportunities."

In Nigeria, for example, where President Goodluck Jonathan has sought international help to combat a five-year-old Boko Haram insurgency in the northeast that has killed thousands, private investors were participating in ground-breaking power generation expansion projects made possible by recent reforms.

Nigeria in catch-up mode

MIGA, its sister arm the International Finance Corporation and the World Bank itself were helping to mobilise nearly $1.7bn of private financing for projects to expand Nigeria's electricity generation. This involved more than $600m of guarantees for the Azura Edo power plant near Benin City in southern Nigeria.

The country, which recently replaced South Africa as Africa's largest economy through a rebasing of its gross domestic product, only had an installed generating capacity of 4 000 MW - 10 times less than South Africa, Wormser said.

"Nigeria has to catch up. It's absolutely critical for its competitiveness and its growth prospects and the World Bank Group has opened the way for new IPPs (independent power producers) to come to the country," he added.

MIGA, which has a special facility for Conflict-Affected and Fragile Economies, could consider supporting investments in Nigeria's violent northeast, where the government has sought World Bank backing for a programme to combat the poverty seen as a factor fueling the Boko Haram rebellion there, he said.

Wormser said the "huge increase" in investment flows to Africa in recent years had been accompanied by greater efforts by investors to insure their equity and loans against political and commercial risk, both with private and public insurance providers and multi-lateral insurers like MIGA.

MIGA's own coverage, including support for infrastructure and power generation projects in several African nations, would reach a record $3.2-3.4bn in the 2014 fiscal year ending June 30, up from $2.8bn last year, he said.

Job creation focus

About a quarter of MIGA's total cover globally this year would be in Africa.

MIGA was also backing power expansion projects in Angola and Cameroon, unlocking vital additional investments and funding.

Wormser said this kind of intervention by the World Bank's political risk insurance arm in support of critical private investments could have an influential "demonstration effect" in rekindling job-creating economic activity in states emerging from the chaos and destruction of internal conflicts.

He cited the case of Ivory Coast, where following the end of a 2011 civil war MIGA provided $750m in guarantees for a total of $2bn of investment in major infrastructure and power projects.

"As a country emerges from crisis, a private project which creates jobs, which restores services, is going to be the most visible sign of stability," Wormser said.

"One good project, even if it is a small project, is going to be seen as a signal for other investors that the time has come to return to the country," he added.

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