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European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

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Logo of the EBRD
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Logo of the EBRD

Founded in 1991, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) uses the tools of investment to help build market economies and democracies in 27 countries from central Europe to central Asia.

The EBRD is owned by 60 countries and two intergovernmental institutions. Despite its public sector shareholders, it invests mainly in private enterprises, usually together with commercial partners.

EBRD provides project financing for banks, industries and businesses, both new ventures and investments in existing companies. It also works with publicly owned companies to support privatization, restructuring state-owned firms and improvement of municipal services.

The EBRD’s mandate stipulates that it must only work in countries that are committed to democratic principles. The EBRD is directed by its founding agreement to promote, in the full range of its activities, environmentally sound and sustainable development.

Members/shareholders

Albania Armenia Australia
Austria Azerbaijan Belarus
Belgium Bosnia and Herzegovina Bulgaria
Canada Croatia Cyprus
Czech Republic Denmark Egypt
Estonia Finland France
Georgia Germany Greece
Hungary Iceland Ireland
Israel Italy Japan
Kazakhstan Korea, Republic of Kyrgyz Republic
Luxembourg FYR Macedonia Malta
Mexico Moldova Mongolia
Morocco Netherlands New Zealand
Norway Poland Portugal
Romania Russia Serbia
Slovak Republic Slovenia Spain
Sweden Switzerland Tajikistan
Turkey Turkmenistan Ukraine
United Kingdom United States of America Uzbekistan
European Community European Investment Bank

Requirements for EBRD financing

EBRD financing for private sector projects generally ranges from €5 million to €250 million, in the form of loans or equity. The average EBRD investment is €25 million.

Smaller projects may be financed through financial intermediaries or through special programmes for smaller direct investments in the less advanced countries.

Criteria
To be eligible for EBRD funding, the project must:
- be located in an EBRD country of operations
- have strong commercial prospects
- involve significant equity contributions in-cash or in-kind from the project sponsor
- benefit the local economy and help develop the private sector
- satisfy banking and environmental standards.

Project structure
The EBRD tailors each project to the needs of the client and to the specific situation of the country, region and sector. The EBRD typically funds up to 35 per cent of the total project cost for a greenfield project or 35 per cent of the long-term capitalisation of the project company. The Bank requires significant equity contributions from the sponsors, which must equal or be greater than the EBRD’s investment.

There must be additional funding from the sponsors, other co-financiers or generated through the EBRD’s syndications programme.

Sectors supported by the EBRD
The EBRD finances projects in most sectors.

These include:
- agribusiness
- energy efficiency
- financial institutions
- manufacturing
- municipal and environmental infrastructure
- natural resources
- power and energy
- property and tourism
- telecommunications, information technology and media
- transport.

Organisation

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EBRD Presidents

April 1991 – June 1993: Jacques Attali
September 1993 – January 1998: Jacques de Larosiere
September 1998 – April 2000: Horst Kohler
July 2000 – present: Jean Lemierre

Headquarters address

One Exchange Square
London EC2A 2JN
United Kingdom

External links

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
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