The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) and the Arab Coordination Group (ACG) have launched a renewed phase of strategic partnership aimed at scaling up co-financing, mobilizing private capital, and accelerating Africa’s economic transformation, in a move designed to address the continent’s widening development financing gap.
The partnership was formally unveiled on Tuesday during a High-Level Consultation Meeting held at the AfDB’s headquarters in Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire, the bank disclosed in a statement published on its website. The meeting brought together senior representatives of both institutions to chart a more coordinated approach to development finance at a time when Africa faces mounting fiscal pressures and limited access to traditional sources of funding.

According to the AfDB, the initiative responds to growing demand for capital in critical sectors such as energy access, climate resilience, food security, regional integration, and private-sector-led growth. With development needs rising faster than available public resources, the Bank said deeper collaboration with the ACG is essential to unlock new and sustainable financing streams.
The consultation established a common platform for the AfDB and ACG members to jointly anchor Arab-African co-financing efforts by leveraging their combined balance sheets, long-term financing capacity, sectoral expertise, and country-level platforms. This approach, the Bank noted, is intended to enable the mobilization of larger and more coordinated public and private investments in support of Africa’s priority development projects.
Discussions during the meeting focused on practical measures to strengthen joint project preparation, harmonize financing approaches, and deepen policy dialogue. Participants also explored ways to leverage each institution’s comparative advantages while supporting country-led development agendas and ensuring that investments deliver measurable impact and long-term resilience.
“Participants explored concrete pathways to enhance joint project preparation, harmonize financing approaches, strengthen policy dialogue, leverage comparative advantages, and support country-led development agendas, while ensuring that investments delivered measurable impact and long-term resilience,” the AfDB said.
The Bank added that the consultation aligns with its broader push to strengthen Africa’s financial sovereignty through the New African Financial Architecture (NAFA). The NAFA framework seeks to better integrate development finance institutions, guarantee providers, insurers, capital markets, and private investors in order to reduce the continent’s reliance on volatile external financing.
The High-Level Consultation Meeting culminated in the adoption of a Joint Declaration on a Strategic Partnership between the AfDB and the ACG. The declaration outlines a shared political vision and translates it into clear operational priorities, while also establishing institutional follow-up mechanisms to guide the next phase of Arab-African cooperation.
Africa’s development financing needs are expanding rapidly, even as global economic uncertainty and tighter financial conditions constrain traditional funding sources. By deepening cooperation, the AfDB and ACG aim to unlock larger pools of long-term and counter-cyclical financing capable of supporting transformational projects across the continent.
The initiative is particularly significant for its emphasis on crowding in private capital and aligning public financing with Africa’s long-term economic transformation goals, including industrialization, climate adaptation, and regional integration—key pillars seen as critical to driving inclusive and sustainable growth across Africa.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The AfDB–ACG partnership underscores a renewed push to close Africa’s growing development financing gap by pooling resources, mobilizing private capital, and coordinating long-term investments to drive the continent’s economic transformation.
























