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Innovative financing is no longer optional, says ECA’s Gatete

30 juin, 2025
Innovative financing is no longer optional, says ECA’s Gatete

Seville, Spain, 30 June 2025 (ECA) - Claver Gatete, Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), has urged a shift from rhetoric to results, calling for financial instruments that reflect Africa’s development needs.

Speaking at a joint side event hosted by the UN’s five regional commissions at the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development (FfD4) in Seville, Spain, he said the continent is already piloting solutions, but global financing systems must adapt.

Innovative financing instruments are no longer optional. They are essential,” Mr Gatete said, underscoring that “the current system continues to limit Africa’s access to affordable finance, despite the continent’s investment potential and development needs.

He outlined a series of ECA-led initiatives aimed at bridging the growing financing gap while supporting economic transformation:

  • A debt-for-nature and industrialization swap piloted in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which ties debt relief to the development of green value chains, including battery and electric vehicle manufacturing

  • The Sustainable Debt Coalition, a platform coordinated by ECA to help African countries access climate finance on better terms and scale up sustainable borrowing

  • An African Investment Map, currently in development, designed to help de-risk investment opportunities and guide capital toward high-impact, bankable projects

Mr. Gatete emphasized that these are not abstract ideas, but tools already being piloted across the continent to align debt relief, climate action and long-term investment.

He also underscored the importance of country platforms that align national priorities, improve coordination across ministries, and provide the transparency needed to attract long term investment.

“Unlocking private finance requires more than good ideas. It requires trust, coherence, and credible institutions,” he said.

The side event was part of a broader push by the five UN regional commissions - ECA, ECE, ECLAC, ESCAP and ESCWA - to emphasize regional solutions to global development finance challenges. Their joint policy brief, Road to Seville, outlines proposals across five areas: domestic resource mobilization, debt sustainability, global economic governance, international cooperation and private finance.

Issued by:
Communications Section
Economic Commission for Africa
PO Box 3001
Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
Tel: +251 11 551 5826
E-mail: eca-info@un.org