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The
World Bank approves a US$235 million credit to
the Government of Bangladesh for a Private
Sector Infrastructure Development Project. The
project will provide both funding and technical
assistance to promote greater private sector
participation in power, gas, water supply,
telecommunications, and transportation. The
credit is provided by the International
Development Association, the World Bank's
concessionary lending arm.
Besides
gas pipelines, the sub-projects could include
new port facilities, toll roads such as the
Dhaka bypass, and a water treatment plant for
Dhaka.
Sufficient
private commercial financing is not
available-primarily due to non-investment grade
rating for Bangladesh debt and the absence of
creditworthy public utilities. Investors,
therefore, seek additional security for
mobilizing market-based funding and supplement
it with other sources of long-term financing.
The project will address this constraint by
establishing a Private Sector Infrastructure
Development Fund. The fund will provide
long-term debt financing for privately-sponsored
infrastructure. The availability of this type of
financing will facilitate better risk-sharing
between private sponsors and the government, and
increase the likelihood that projects with a
high economic priority are implemented. The fund
will thus have a catalytic role in attracting
other sources of commercial and institutional
finance, such as from export credit agencies and
multi- and bilateral institutions.
Lack
of a well-defined policy, legal and regulatory
framework, and the inability of public agencies
to develop and promote sound transactions for
private participation further constrain private
investment. The project provides technical
assistance to address these constraints and to
strengthen the government's ability to develop
and market well-structured project
opportunities. Technical assistance will also be
provided to bolster transaction development and
facilitation, capacity building, institutional
development, and for conducting feasibility
studies. A key feature of this project is the
assistance to the Government for establishing
transparent, internationally competitive bidding
processes for selecting private sector sponsors
and awarding concessions.
It
is expected that the total investment in private
sector projects will be nearly US$900 million.
Nearly two-thirds of this funding will be from
private sector, commercial, and institutional
sources. Besides the US$235 million provided by
this credit, additional financing will be
forthcoming by the British Department for
International Development (US$7.5 million) and
the Canadian International Development Agency
(US$3.5 million). The credit will be on standard
IDA terms with a maturity of 40 years including
a 10-year grace period 
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