- IFC is investing up to $130 million in Al-Douh Iraqi Company for Cement Industries to support expansion, create new jobs.
- Funding will promote the use of energy-efficient, climate-friendly technologies to boost sustainable cement production.
IFC is investing in Al-Douh Iraqi Company for Cement Industries (“Al Douh”), a leading cement manufacturer and part of Al-Riyadh Investment Companies Group (RICG), to help boost economic diversification and spur sustainable growth in Iraq, while creating hundreds of jobs and bolstering reconstruction efforts.
IFC is providing a financing package of up to $130 million in long-term debt to Al-Douh. The financing will enable Al Douh to expand its cement production capacity by 1.9 million tons per annum enabling the company to reach overall production of approximately 3.0 million tons of cement by the end of 2025. Of the total financing provided, up to $25 million will be mobilized from the Managed Co-lending Portfolio Program (MCPP), IFC’s syndications platform for institutional investors. The company’s expansion is expected to create more than 2,700 direct and indirect jobs, including along the cement value chain.
IFC’s funding will also promote the use of energy-efficient technologies in alignment with the Paris Agreement. The company is planning to install a new high thermal efficiency kiln, a new captive power plant using natural gas as a primary fuel rather than heavy fuel oil (HFO), and a new waste heat recovery for power generation system that will replace up to 30 percent of electricity generated by fossil fuel-based captive power plants. These will enable the project to meet the criteria outlined in the European Union taxonomy for sustainable cement clinker production.
"We are very grateful for this partnership with the International Finance Corporation, and we thank them for their great efforts in completing this major and vital agreement. We look forward to building a long-term joint relationship in this project and subsequent projects,"
said Sheikh Hatam Al-Khawam, Chairman of the Board of Al-Douh Iraqi Company for Cement Industries.
IFC is also providing advisory services to Al-Douh, by deploying IFC’s cement decarbonization tool to facilitate a decarbonization roadmap and help decrease its greenhouse gas footprint. Additionally, IFC is supporting the company in setting good governance and environmental, health, and safety standards.
"Growth and decarbonization can go hand in hand, as this investment highlights,”
said Ashruf Megahed, IFC’s Regional Industry Head, Manufacturing, Agribusiness & Services for the Middle East, Central Asia, Türkiye, Afghanistan, and Pakistan.
"IFC’s aim is to empower a key player in Iraq’s private sector to take a leading role in the economy’s diversification and reconstruction while supporting sustainable development."
Iraq’s reconstruction needs are estimated at almost $90 billion, while the country’s economy remains substantially dependent on oil revenues, making it vulnerable to oil price fluctuations. Iraq will also need a substantial $230 billion investment by 2040 to embark on a green growth path, according to the World Bank Group’s Country Climate and Development Report, underscoring the need to decarbonize the industrial sector to achieve these goals.
IFC has been a pivotal force in Iraq, channeling over $1.2 billion since 2005 to fuel the growth of its private sector. Its current committed portfolio stands at around $188 million, invested in dynamic sectors like energy, telecoms, and banking. Recent initiatives aim to fortify food security, help the country reduce gas flaring and associated GHG emissions, and modernize Umm Qasr, Iraq's largest port, to boost trade.
IFC also signed an agreement in September 2023 to help develop the country’s first airport public-private partnership project to modernize Baghdad International Airport.
About IFC :
IFC — a member of the World Bank Group — is the largest global development institution focused on the private sector in emerging markets. We work in more than 100 countries, using our capital, expertise, and influence to create markets and opportunities in developing countries. In fiscal year 2023, IFC committed a record $43.7 billion to private companies and financial institutions in developing countries, leveraging the power of the private sector to end extreme poverty and boost shared prosperity as economies grapple with the impacts of global compounding crises.