KENYA INNOVATIVE FINANCE FACILITY FOR WATER. Highlights

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K I F F W A KENYA INNOVATIVE FINANCE FACILITY FOR WATER Highlights

KIFFWA - Why Why is innovative financing for water in Kenya a good idea? The Kenya Innovative Finance Facility for Water (KIFFWA) mobilises new forms of finance for the Kenyan water sector. This is needed for two reasons. Firstly, the water challenges in Kenya are vast 1 and secondly there is a tremendous financing gap to address those challenges. 2 1 The Water Situation in Kenya Kenya faces water security problems resulting in an array of social, environmental and economic issues. Water use and water demand for different purposes (drinking, agricultural, industrial etc.) is expected to rise significantly in the coming years. Addressing these problems requires huge investments. Water resources developed Access to safe water 15% Urban 70% Rural 50% - mostly un-piped water Annual water replenishment rate per capita 647M 3 (TZ 2,696M 3, UG 2,940M 3 ) Irrigation water development Infrastructure for surface water 5% of potential 5,000 ha per annum 5.3m 3 (down from 11.4m 3 per capita in 1960) storage per capita Non revenue water for WSPs Annual investment gap Average - 45% USD 1.2B (required USD 1.7B, GoK allocation USD 500M) 2 Source: AfDB Kenya Country Strategy Paper 2014-2018, Kenya National Water Services Strategy: 2007-2015 Plan 2 The water financing gap The Kenyan National Water Plan 2030 indicates that over USD 2 billion annually is needed for the coming years. As public budget cannot cover these investments for water alone, other sources are needed. However, there is a lack of investment-ready and/or bankable initiatives and there is a lack of understanding of the water sector by lenders and investors. Financing expertise in Funding sources (3T s) the development stage of water initiatives is required to bridge the gap between water and finance sectors. In the picture below a schematic done by the World Bank shows a very general, but illustrative overview of funding and financing of public goods and infrastructure in general and water in particular. Repayable financing Tariffs User fees for services provided and household investment for self-supply Pre-finance Concessional finance Provided by development agencies with a grant element (e.g. soft loans ) Transfers Transfers from external sources, such as international donors (ODA grants), foundations, NGO s, remittances Repay Private finance Provided by private sector financiers at market rate (vendor finance, microfinance, loans, bonds, equity) Taxes Domestic taxes levied by local and central governments and provided as grants or subsidies Key Private funds Mixed public and private funds Public funds Source: Easing the transition to commercial finance for sustainable water and sanitation, World Bank, August 2017

KIFFWA - How How to mobilise 100 million worth of water investments with 10 million? KIFFWA pursues an innovative way of deploying development funds and commercial capital to water initiatives in Kenya, by providing early stage capital and expertise to developers of water initiatives. In that way KIFFWA acts as a co-developer of a given water initiative and de-risks the lead developer of that initiative during the development phase, typically the most risky phase of any initiative. 3 Besides offering capital during the development stage KIFFWA s unique selling point is to bring water-financing expertise to the table: structuring the initiative as such that it becomes investment ready and attractive for different types of financiers. With a start up grant of 10 million over the period 2016-2019 the local KIFFWA organization is set up and capitalized enabling investments in a pipeline consisting of 15 to 30 water initiatives representing a value of 50 to 150 million. In order to operate in a financially sustainable way, KIFFWA expects to earn back its investments, allowing KIFFWA to continue operations after 2019. Repayment conditions need to be negotiated between the lead developer and KIFFWA; at financial close KIFFWA either exits directly (one off fee) or remains shareholder (equity share) or creditor (loan). 4 3 Creating leverage by de-risking the development phase 100 10 M M Financial close Concept Early-Stage Development Advanced Development Construction Operation/ Service Delivery Project Risk Project Cost KIFFWA supports bridging this gap Time 1% - 10% of Project Cost 90% of Project Cost As a co-developer with capital and financial engineering capability, KIFFWA de-risks the development phase of water initiatives, creating optimal leverage in that way

KIFFWA - What What does KIFFWA look like? 4 The KIFFWA Universe The KIFFWA universe consists of all water sub sectors, a flexible set of financial products and rigorous selection criteria. Being an impact investor in water initiatives, it is at the heart of KIFFWA s business to address environmental, social and governance issues alongside financial viability. Products Convertible grants: when financial close is reached (success), the grant is converted into a one off fee, an equity stake or a loan. In case financial close is not reached (failure) the contribution is a grant. All Sub Sectors Eligible Ports Hydro power Drinking Water Industrial Water Irrigation Sanitation & Hygiene Integrated Water Resource Management Flood protection Selection Criteria Positive Environmental Impact Positive Social Impact Financial Viability Technology Transfer Strong Lead Developer Sound Governance KIFFWA provides financial and technical support to developers of water initiatives in order to catalyze investment and growth of the water sector 5 The KIFFWA Organisation KIFFWA is an impact investor, providing early stage capital and expertise to developers of water initiatives (see also KIFFWA-How ). Start up capital is provided by the Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Kenya (EKN) and channeled to KIFFWA through the Netherlands Water Partnership (NWP), which is in charge of setting up the local organization and capitalizing the investment fund. KIFFWA s board of directors, management and investment committee is a fine mix of finance-, project development-, and water expertise (see backpage). 7 The first initiatives KIFFWA has invested in are the establishment of the Kenya Pooled Water Fund (KPWF) 6 a pooled bond facility and its portfolio of Kenyan Drinking Water and Sanitation Service Providers (WSP s). 6 Water Initiative 1-7 EKN Grant NWP Grant KIFFWA Convertible grants Water Water Initiative 8 Initiative 9 4 Water Initiative 10 Etc. KPWF WSP 1 WSP 2 WSP 3 WSP 4 WSP 5 WSP 6

KIFFWA - Highlights 2016-2017 January 2016 Kick-off The Kenya Innovative Finance Facility for Water (KIFFWA) programme kicked off in January 2016 with three different working groups setting up both KIFFWA and its first initiative: the Kenya Pooled Water Fund (KPWF). January 2016 Investment in first initiative starts The KPWF is a pooled financing facility that aims to provide Kenyan WSPs access to long tenor local currency finance by unlocking the local capital market in Kenya for their drinking water and sanitation infrastructure projects. 6 Throughout Meeting the Kenyan Water Sector Staffed with dedicated water and financial professionals, a total of approximately 30 missions to Kenya took place, jointly forming the driver for the results achieved so far. KIFFWA and KPWF were presented on many meeting including the African Water Association conference in Nairobi in February 2016 and the Kenya Water Week in November 2016. Throughout Creating the enabling environment The Embassy of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Kenya (EKN) has played a fundamental role for both KIFFWA and KPWF to generate the needed political and institutional support. This has especially been important for establishing the KPWF, as credibility and trust determine the success or failure of attracting the needed institutional investors to buy future KPWF bonds. November 2016 Business plans The lion s share of activities realized in the first three quarters of 2016 have been the preparation of two business plans (KIFFWA and KPWF); both of which were approved in November 2016 by EKN in Kenya. 1 October 2016 30 June 2017 Establishment and staff recruitment Anticipating on this approval, the working groups already laid the foundations for establishing the KIFFWA and KPWF (legal) entities/independent organizations and the first steps have been made to recruit high quality, seasoned professionals to staff both KIFFWA and the KPWF as soon as the respective organizations run independently. Throughout since 1 July 2016 Pipeline of initiatives The current KIFFWA pipeline is dynamic and a thorough selection of a long list of 30 initiatives has led to tentatively selecting 6 promising initiatives, in addition to the KPWF and the 6 selected WSPs that will borrow from the KPWF (see figure 6). Various sub-sectors are represented in the KIFFWA pipeline, ranging from drinking water to desalination, (water for) agriculture and (green) port development. Throughout since 1 July 2016 Cooperation with development partners Discussions have been held for the mobilization of development partners, for potential cooperation on either KIFFWA organisation level, or on the level of the initiatives that KIFFWA invests in. Throughout Spreading the message For purposes of consultation and to foster goodwill and promote KIFFWA and the KPWF, representatives of the teams have attended meetings in 8 different national and international publications, and has been (re)presented at 9 meetings and conferences, taking place in Hungary, Kenya, Sweden and The Netherlands. The launch of the local organizations is anticipated to take place late 2017 or early 2018. 6 KIFFWA s first initiative - KPWF Domestic Institutional Investors Proceeds from Local Currency Bond Bond Repayment Guarantees Kenya Pooled Water Fund Water Utility Support and Loans Loan Repayments Reserve Fund (First Loss Facility) Water Utilities WSP 1 WSP 4 WSP 2 WSP 5 WSP 3 WSP 6

7 Who s who and how to get in touch KIFFWA Board of Directors Susan Mudhune (Chair) Carlo van Wageningen Johan Kruger Joris van Oppenraaij KIFFWA Management Joseph Murubula (CEO) Evans Wesonga (Associate) Investment Committee Johan Kruger (Chair) Annabell Waititu Hein Gietema Imran Kahn Kevin Kamemba It is our ambition to set an international example for co-developing water initiatives in emerging markets Contact KIFFWA Ltd Kenya Innovative Finance Facility for Water 05 Dik Dik Gardens Kileleshwa, Nairobi Kenya E info@kiffwa.com Download the KIFFWA quick scan template at www.kiffwa.com