Most funds that back Africa raise dollars abroad. Then the math breaks when local money loses value.
The Money Problem It Wants To Fix
ARM-Harith is an African investment firm. It is raising a new fund with a $200 million goal.
It has already pulled in a first round of about $76 million. The cash will fund clean energy across the continent.
Here is the trap it dodges. A project earns local money, but the fund owes its backers in dollars.
When the local money drops, the gains shrink. So strong returns can vanish through no fault of the project.
ARM-Harith's fund holds both dollars and local money at once. Picture a wallet with two pockets, so cash in matches cash out.
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Who Is Backing It
The fund leans on $20 million in early money. It comes from FSD Africa and the African Development Bank.
That kind of anchor cash calms other backers. It signals the fund is safe enough to join.
The bigger goal is closer to home. ARM-Harith wants to tap African pension and insurance money.
That cash usually sits on the sidelines. Here it would back power projects on its own doorstep.
For a region short on funding, that shift matters. Local money staying local is the whole point.
What It Aims To Build
The targets are clear and bold. The fund wants 200 megawatts of new clean power.
That is enough to light about 100,000 homes. It also aims to cut 800,000 tons of carbon.
The plan would create roughly 10,000 jobs too. So the payoff is meant to be local, not just financial.
The focus is energy and roads across the continent. These are the kinds of projects that lift whole towns.
Much of the need sits in sub-Saharan Africa. Many homes there still lack steady power.
Closing that gap is the long-term aim. Cheap, clean energy can pull a whole region forward.
Why This Setup Is New
Banks call this a blended-finance fund. Public money goes in first to take the early risk.
That softer cushion draws in private cash. Pensions and insurers feel safer once a bank has skin in the game.
The dollar-and-local mix is the rare part. ARM-Harith calls it a first for the continent.
If it works, copycats will follow fast. A fix for the currency trap would unlock a lot of stuck money.
Big global lenders are watching the model closely. A win here could shape how Africa funds power for years.
What To Watch
The first $76 million is in the door. The real test is the long climb to $200 million.
A first-of-its-kind fund has to prove it works. That is the bar ARM-Harith set for itself.
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