According to the Washington-based financial institution’s
project list, the $2.2 billion will cut across six different projects.
World Bank earmarked $500 million for the ‘Community Action
(for) Resilience and Economic Stimulus Programme,’ which will be approved by
March 17.
On March 31, the World Bank plans to approve $552 million
for the ‘HOPE for Quality Basic Education for All’ and $800 million for
‘Accelerating Nutrition Results in Nigeria 2.0’.
Also, the World Bank said it will approve $300 million for
the ‘Solutions for the Internally Displaced and Host Communities Project’ on
July 15 and another $300 million for the ‘Health Security Program’ on August 19.
TheCable also observed another project, ‘Building Resilient
Digital Infrastructure for Growth (BRIDGE)’ will receive $500 million after
approval on September 15.
World Bank said the BRIDGE initiative and the Health
Security Programme are in the concept review stage, implying that they are
still in the early stages of assessment and planning.
Also, the Accelerating Nutrition Results in Nigeria 2.0 and
the HOPE for Quality Basic Education projects have progressed to the
negotiation stage.
The multilateral lender gave Nigeria $1.5 billion in 2024
for a number of significant development initiatives meant to strengthen the
country’s ability to mobilise resources and maintain economic stability.
On November 19, 2024, TheCable reported that Nigeria’s loan
exposure from the World Bank’s International Development Association (IDA) rose
to $17.1 billion as of September 30, 2024.
According to the IDA’s financial statement for September
2024, Nigeria maintained the third spot in the latest top 10 borrowers’ list.
As of December 31, 2024, Nigeria’s exposure dropped to $16.8
billion, but it still retained its position as the third-largest debtor to the
World Bank’s IDA.