Biden revives Trump's Africa business initiative; eyes future digital
project
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[July 27, 2021] By
Doyinsola Oladipo and Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Biden
administration on Tuesday will announce a new push to expand business
ties between U.S. companies and Africa, with a focus on building needed
digital, health and physical infrastructure on the continent, a senior
U.S. official said.
U.S. industry executives welcome the interest, but say dollar flows will
lag until the Biden administration wraps up its lengthy review of Trump
administration trade measures and sets a clear policy on investments in
liquefied natural gas.
Dana Banks, senior director for Africa at the White House National
Security Council, will kick off a U.S.-Africa business summit, with a
pledge to "re-imagine" and revive Prosper Africa, an initiative unveiled
by the Trump administration in 2018.
President Joe Biden, who requested nearly $80 million for the initiative
in his budget proposal in May, aims to focus the initiative on women and
equity, with an expanded role for small- and medium-sized businesses,
she said.
Banks said the administration's goal was to "reinvigorate Prosper Africa
as the centerpiece of U.S. economic and commercial engagement with
Africa," with more details to be released soon on a companion initiative
called Digital Africa.
"This is an area that is a priority both at home and abroad," Banks
said, adding that African countries were eager to expand their
cooperation with the United States and its companies.
U.S. business executives warn the United States is in danger of being
overtaken by China and Europe, which are already investing and
concluding trade agreements across the continent.
"We can't wait another year to devise an Africa policy; we need to be
bold in our thinking," said Scott Eisner, president of the U.S. Chamber
of Commerce's U.S.-Africa Business Center.
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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks during an event to
celebrate the 31st anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) in the White House Rose Garden in Washington, U.S., July
26, 2021. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
Eisner said that many companies had started to eye investments in Kenya given
the Trump administration's talks with Kenya on a bilateral free trade agreement,
but that those plans were on ice until the Biden review of that policy was
completed.
The U.S. Trade Representative's office had no immediate comment on the status of
the review.
Another hurdle is uncertainty about the administration's policy on LNG projects.
Nigeria and other countries
https://www.reuters.com/
business/energy/nigeria-seeks-1-bln-key-gas-pipeline-it-awaits-chinese-lending-2021-07-16
are eager to secure U.S. investment in such plans, but are waiting to see
whether the administration will back LNG investments even as it seeks to halve
U.S. fossil-fuel emissions.
U.S. LNG exports have surged under Biden. Meeting Biden's goal of halving fossil
fuel emissions would require the United States to stop building natural gas
power plants and exporting LNG, experts say.
Biden's policies are energy-neutral, and administration officials have been
tight-lipped about any specific plans on LNG investments. The U.S. Development
Finance Corporation had no immediate comment on its policy on backing LNG
projects.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal and Doyinsola Oladipo; additional reporting by
Valerie Volcovici; editing by Tim Ahmann and Gerry Doyle)
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