MEPs are expected to pass on Thursday (6 July) the new European Fund for Sustainable Development (EFSD), a key element to a plan to raise as much as €88 billion, blending EU funds with national and private financing, bringing African development to a new level.

European Parliament rapporteurs, Slovak SKS lawmaker Eduard Kukan (EPP), Romanian PSD MEP Doru-Claudian Frunzulică (S&D) and Spanish PSOE legislator Eider Gardiazabal Rubial (S&D) drafted the parliament resolution, which contains more than a hundred amendments, compared to the text, proposed by the Commission.

I have been working on the #EFSD file for the past months in @EP_ForeignAff and it has been agreed. Read more here https://t.co/igZahGMRtN — Eduard Kukan (@EduardKukan) June 28, 2017

Before going to plenary, the EFSD was approved by a “historic” vote in three parliamentary committees with a huge majority.

European Fund for Sustainable Development approved in historic AFET-BUDG-DEVE tri-committee vote 76-10, 3 abstaining. Let's use it. #EFSD pic.twitter.com/38H4YRDnus — Petri Sarvamaa (@petrisarvamaa) July 3, 2017

The key objective of the EFSD is to provide an integrated financial package to finance investments starting in regions of Africa for countries that are signatories to the Cotonou agreement of June 2000.

Thanks for this great support.We've managed to improve the European Fund x Sustainable Development #EFSD.A good instrument to complement ODA pic.twitter.com/zMw6M4Vx5p — Eider Gardiazabal (@EGardiazabal) July 3, 2017

The EFSD is a key element of the European External Investment Plan (EEIP), an innovative approach to boost investments in Africa and EU neighbourhood countries. The EEIP consists of three pillars: the first provides improved access to finance. At its heart lies the EFSD, which combines existing investment facilities with a new guarantee. This guarantee will be passed on to intermediary financing institutions, which in turn will lend support – via loans, guarantees, equity or similar products – to final beneficiaries, such as private companies.

This guarantee will be passed on to intermediary financing institutions, which in turn will lend support – via loans, guarantees, equity or similar products – to final beneficiaries, such as private companies.

With an input of €3.35 billion from the EU budget and the European Development Fund (EDF), the EEIP will support innovative guarantees and similar instruments in support of private investment, enabling it to mobilise up to €44 billion of investments.

EP TODAY:#EPlenary votes on #EFSD scheme aiming to mobilise €44bln in private investment &address root causes of migration in fragile states — EP PressService (@EuroParlPress) July 6, 2017

If member states and other partners match the EU’s contribution, the total amount could reach €88 billion. The scheme has often been compared to the Juncker Plan to boost the ailing European economy.

Mimica: Europe's new plan for Africa 'could reach €88 billion' EXCLUSIVE / One of the keynote announcements of Jean-Claude Juncker’s State of the Union address last week was the European External Investment Plan. EU development aid chief Neven Mimica gives the details in an interview with EURACTIV.com

The bolder approach with Africa is largely motivated by the need address some root causes of migration, with more and more people attempting the perilous journey with economic motivations. MEPs insisted however that the primary aim of EFSD was to combat poverty, not to stem migration.

Great speech of @LindaMcAvanMEP in #EPPlenary: #EFSD is not an instrument to tackle migration but must be key tool to combat poverty — Counter Balance (@Counter_Balance) July 5, 2017

A large number of MEPs took the floor in a plenary debate on Wednesday (5 July), in a rare show of support for the initiative. Luxembourgish Green lawmaker MEP Claude Turmes called it the “best EU initiative ever”.

NGOs, however, pointed at risks related to the new scheme. EURACTIV obtained a letter, signed by an alliance of NGOs, to the Commission services, pointing out at their numerous concerns. The campaigners see a risk that billions of euros of tax payers’ money will benefit big multinational corporations at the expense of the people in poverty that it is meant to support.

“This fund risks becoming a mechanism more focused on subsidising European multinationals than helping developing countries,” said María José Romero, policy and advocacy manager at Eurodad, the European Network on Debt and Development.

Hilary Jeune, Oxfam’s EU development policy advisor also pointed out that when development money is used to subsidise private investors, European companies are actually more likely to profit than are the domestic businesses that contribute most to poverty alleviation.

“The new EU plan’s focus on migration could risk diverting aid away from poverty eradication. Development cooperation must focus on the actual needs of people, not on stopping them from moving,” Jeune stressed.