ENLARGE
Infrastructure for Tomorrow sets a mission for the Bank by requiring all investments across infrastructure and other productive sectors to add value through one or more of these four thematic priorities:
- Green Infrastructure
- Connectivity and Regional Cooperation
- Technology Enabled Infrastructure
- Private Capital Mobilization
Our Corporate Strategy outlines how AIIB will realize its mission through five pillars: (i) establishing market position; (ii) achieving impact at scale; (iii) adding value along the project cycle; (iv) serving a broad range of clients; and (v) building the corporate culture. These pillars are complemented by our core principles: (i) high project standards; (ii) financial sustainability and sound banking; and (iii) strong multilateral governance and oversight. We monitor progress through our annual business indicators, which comprise the Corporate Scorecard indicators as set out in the Strategy and several additional indicators corresponding to focus areas highlighted for the year.
Learning from the experience of 2020, we continued to be agile, adaptive and responsive to unexpected changes that arose due to extraordinary external circumstances, in particular, the COVID-19 pandemic and its ensuing crisis and recovery. In 2021, we supported clients with our COVID-19 Crisis Recovery Facility in parallel with our regular investments in line with our Corporate Strategy and Thematic Priorities.
In 2021, AIIB focused on the intersections between COVID-19 crisis needs and Corporate Strategy objectives while remaining responsive to evolving client demand. Five focus areas for AIIB’s business in 2021 were identified to address the COVID-19 crisis while remaining aligned to the Bank’s Strategy objectives: green infrastructure financing, technology-enabled infrastructure financing, private sector infrastructure financing, broadening client reach, and maintaining high project standards. To support a more balanced implementation of our Strategy, the Bank also advanced other areas across the five pillars in the Corporate Strategy, particularly building staffing capacity, foundational expertise and operational readiness to better enable progress, as well as investing in connectivity and regional cooperation, social infrastructure, upstream project support and corporate culture.
We strengthened our operations and put resources toward building green infrastructure and technology-enabled infrastructure investment pipelines, particularly through strategy development, partnerships and project financing. The emphasis on green and technology-enabled infrastructure financing allowed the Bank to support AIIB Members’ efforts to catalyze a green infrastructure-driven recovery and accelerate the adoption of digital technologies, especially for digital connectivity, which became more important during the pandemic.
In line with our Corporate Strategy, we worked with a larger set of clients and AIIB Members across the income spectrum while maintaining a strong focus on Asia. We also broadened our impact by gradually increasing operations with nonregional Members. Three members (Rwanda, Jordan and Hungary) availed of AIIB financing for the first time under the Facility for a total financing of USD666 million. As the COVID-19 crisis has disproportionately affected low- and middle-income economies, we increased our efforts to broaden client reach, particularly those in Asia. We had five vaccine financing projects in China, Indonesia, Mongolia and the Philippines.
Green Infrastructure
In 2021, AIIB continued to originate and structure green infrastructure projects with climate adaptation, climate mitigation and other environmental benefits to support Members’ low-carbon, climate-resilient transition and environmental sustainability and, as the crisis subsides, their pursuit of a sustainable economic recovery and development. We engaged with clients to identify climate and green financing opportunities across key infrastructure sectors and work in close coordination with other multilateral development banks and partners to support a green recovery. Ongoing collaborations with multilateral and bilateral partners and international concessional and grant facilities, such as the GIF and Multilateral Cooperation Center for Development Finance (MCDF), would enhance the Bank’s expertise and capacity to support blended financing in climate-positive and green infrastructure projects going forward. In 2021, 29 approved green infrastructure projects accounted for 88 percent of the total number of approved regular infrastructure projects.
For more information about AIIB’s climate financing, see
Climate Financing.
Connectivity and Regional Cooperation
Improving infrastructure connectivity in Asia and promoting regional cooperation and partnership is part of the Bank’s mandate. In our Corporate Strategy, we introduced Connectivity and Regional Cooperation as a thematic priority for financing and set a target to achieve 25-30 percent cross-border connectivity (CBC) projects in actual financing approvals by 2030.
In 2021, the Bank continued to invest in connectivity infrastructure in various sectors and achieved a 20 percent share of CBC financing compared to 26 percent in 2020. The transport sector provided the largest contribution to both the connectivity and regional cooperation thematic priority and the CBC target out of all the sectors financed by the Bank. At the same time, the growth in digital infrastructure and financial intermediary projects contributing to the thematic priority and CBC target also signaled an increasing diversification of our connectivity investments beyond traditional infrastructure.
The COVID-19 pandemic revealed the fragility of mobility and connectivity networks around the globe as transport and supply chain disruptions persisted with no end in sight. 2021 saw a huge drop in demand for passenger transport infrastructure and services amid public health concerns, while demand for logistics, freight and e-commerce surged as people turned to door-to-door goods and services delivery. Across the globe, the massive shift to remote work exposed vast discrepancies in digital access and connectivity between and within countries. The Bank’s financing in connectivity infrastructure aimed to improve the resilience, flexibility, efficiency and accessibility of both physical and digital connectivity infrastructure. In 2021, eight approved connectivity and regional cooperation thematic priority projects accounted for 24 percent of the total number of approved regular infrastructure projects.
Technology-Enabled Infrastructure
The COVID-19 crisis has demonstrated both the importance of digital connectivity and infrastructure and the significant and diversified investments required to reap the benefits of technology. Drawing on lessons learned from the crisis, we supported Members investing in hard infrastructure (e.g., towers, cable, data centers) to strengthen digital connectivity, and, where feasible, soft infrastructure to increase the efficiency and resilience of infrastructure (e.g. digitalization of public transportation, electric vehicles and applications of artificial intelligence). This approach is in line with our Digital Infrastructure Sector Strategy and Corporate Strategy and will further contribute to supporting Members’ efforts to harness digital infrastructure and technology for economic recovery and longer-term sustainable growth. The Bank also worked closely with reputable market players, including leading fund managers focusing on digital infrastructure and technology in Asia, to invest in several innovative technology-enabled infrastructures that demonstrate the Bank’s market positioning. In 2021, 13 approved technology-enabled infrastructure projects accounted for 39 percent of the total number of approved regular infrastructure projects.
Private Capital Mobilization
AIIB aims to support private capital mobilization for infrastructure financing by leveraging our balance sheet and promoting infrastructure as an asset class. According to our Corporate Strategy, the Bank supports projects that directly or indirectly mobilize private financing in sectors within our mandate.
In 2021, the pandemic continued to dampen investor and financier confidence, including in emerging market infrastructure, as government debt levels continued to surge and policymakers shifted to prioritizing health and social welfare with little remaining public funding for infrastructure development or renewal. We therefore doubled down on our efforts to attract the private sector into infrastructure financing and mobilized USD1.3 billion of provisional private capital over the year. We deployed a range of financing instruments to meet client needs, including project financing, syndications, guarantees, structured financing, financing through financial intermediaries, capital market development projects (bond portfolios) that highlight the Bank’s strengths, as well as equity investments (funds and direct equity).
Over the year, we continued to strengthen our reputation as a sustainable investor under our Sustainable Capital Markets Initiative. In March 2021, our Asia ESG Enhanced Credit Managed Portfolio won the Investor of the Year (fund) category of Environmental Finance’s 2021 Bond Awards. This was in recognition of our achievements in innovating and developing the Asian ESG market. In April, we launched our Sustainable Development Bond Framework to facilitate bond investors’ assessments of the Bank’s commitment to sustainable development. The framework outlined how we are adhering to the principles set out in our Environmental and Social Framework and helping Members meet their commitments under the Paris Agreement and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. In the same month, we successfully priced our debut AUD500 million sustainable development Kangaroo Bond, which saw strong uptake in Australia (32 percent) and across the Asian region (55 percent). In 2021, 16 approved private capital mobilization projects accounted for 48 percent of the total number of approved regular infrastructure projects.