The World Bank and Japan have launched a partnership to help emerging markets and developing countries (EMDCs) develop their clean-energy manufacturing and mineral industries, which garnered more than $40mn of initial pledged contribution.
The partnership was coined as the Resilient and Inclusive Supply-chain Enhancement (RISE) initiative and was launched on 11 October during the ongoing IMF-World Bank annual meeting in Morocco's Marakesh. It aims to support low- and middle-income countries in mineral processing, refining as well as component manufacturing and assembling of "clean energy products" to diversify the global supply chain, according to Japan's ministry of finance.
Japan plans to contribute $25mn to the initiative, while the remaining pledged amount will come from Italy, South Korea, Canada and the UK. Chile and India acted as representatives of prospective recipient countries during the launch event, according to the World Bank.
"The energy transition will create a trillion-dollar market, with tens of millions of jobs along global mineral value chains," said the World Bank. "It represents an opportunity for EMDCs to build manufacturing capacity, boost job growth, and strengthen long-term economic development."
Concerns surrounding a lack of minerals supply chain diversification and lack of participation from EMDCs in the rapidly developing industry have escalated this year. Minerals are crucial to manufacturing clean energy products like solar panels, wind turbines, electric vehicles (EVs).
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in July released a report that pointed out a fall in the value of international critical mineral projects in developing economies in 2022, with most battery manufacturing facilities located in developed countries, especially the US. Another UNCTAD report released in August urged African nations to avoid only exporting their raw minerals, and should instead consider higher value-adding manufacturing activities.
"Mineral resources are the currency that drives economic growth," said South African deputy president Paul Mashatile this week. But "any conversation about developing Africa's resources must come from the perspective of African nations for their own benefit", he added.
Indonesia, Chile and African nations have all taken action to advance domestic industrialisation for their mineral industries. Indonesia imposed nickel and bauxite ore export bans and has a similar plan for copper, while Chile imposed mandatory state participation in its lithium industry.
"This [RISE] partnership will give developing countries the promise of a brighter future, one with a healthy economy and a livable planet," said World Bank's President Ajay Banga. "Countries will have new economic opportunities in clean energy and minerals industries; leading to jobs that help them build better lives for themselves and their families."