India Exim Bank Lends Ethiopia $300 Million for Rail to Djibouti   By William Davison      businessweek.com      Export-Import Bank of India will lend $300 million to Ethiopia to help  construct a railway to a planned port on the Red Sea in neighboring  Djibouti.      Exim Bank will open the credit line once technical  studies are completed on the 210-kilometer (130-mile) link from Asaita  in northeastern Ethiopia to Tadjourah, Managing Director T.C.A.  Ranganathan said in an interview yesterday in Addis Ababa.      The  port will have a dedicated terminal for shipments from Toronto,  Canada-based Allana Potash Corp. (AAA), which is developing a  $642-million potash mine in Ethiopia’s northeast.       The government of landlocked Ethiopia plans to lay more than 2,000  kilometers of standard-gauge track during a five-year national growth  blueprint through mid-2015. The country is seeking to spur a mining  boom, attract increasing investment for telecommunications and  manufacturing and help make the economy less reliant on small-scale  agriculture.      Revenue from mining is expected to “surge” after  the award of 24 new concessions in 2006-07, bringing its expected  contribution to 10 percent of gross domestic product in a decade,  according to the website of the Ethiopian Embassy in Washington. Mining  and quarrying accounted for less than 1 percent of the Horn of African  nation’s GDP in 2010, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.       Ethiopia accounted for 11 percent of global tantalum output, a material  used in transistors for mobile phones, computers and digital cameras  and it also produced cement and gold, according to the survey. It has  deposits of opal and soda ash, among other minerals.      Assisting Africa      “We must assist Africa and partner with them in their development by offering whatever expertise we have,” Ranganathan said.       The Exim Bank funding can be spent buying goods and services from  India, according to a press statement released by the Mumbai-based  lender today. Ranganathan and Ethiopian State Finance Minister Ahmed  Shide signed the loan agreement in New Delhi on June 13, according to  the statement.      State-run Ethiopian Railways Corp. says the  government has secured or is in talks to get export financing from banks  in Turkey, China, Russia and Brazil.      Exim Bank has  previously extended credit worth $640 million for sugar factories and  $65 million on the power transmission network in Ethiopia, according to  the statement.      Earlier loans from Exim Bank have carried a  1.5 percent interest rate with a 5-year grace period and maturity of two  decades on longer, according to information on the website of  Ethiopia’s Finance Ministry.      To contact the reporter on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa at wdavison3@bloomberg.net      To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin at asguazzin@bloomberg.net |