Cofinancing

Investment Projects Cofinanced with Australia, 1 January 2008 - 31 December 2012

Country Project ADB Amounta
($ million)
Cofinancing Amount
($ million)
Type of Cofinancingb
Bangladesh Third Primary Education Development 320.00 35.00 G
Cambodia Flood Damage Emergency Reconstruction 55.00 5.25 G
Greater Mekong Subregion: Rehabilitation of the Railway
in Cambodia (2nd Supplementary)
- 0.96 G
Greater Mekong Subregion: Rehabilitation of the Railway
in Cambodia (Supplementary)
- 21.50 G
Road Asset Management 6.00 4.80 G
Indonesia Eximbank 100.00 25.00 C
Kiribati South Tarawa Sanitation Improvement Sector 7.56 13.95 G
Nepal School Sector Program (Supplementary) - 3.47 G
School Sector Program 65.00 15.60 G
Papua New Guinea Rural Primary Health Services Delivery 20.00 40.00 G
  Microfinance Expansion 13.00 6.00 G
Regional Trade Finance Programc 4,566.02 13.02 C
Solomon Islands Domestic Maritime Support (Sector) (Supplementary) - 4.30 G
Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) - 0.47 G
Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) 2 - 2.08 G
Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) 3 - 0.74 G
Second Road Improvement (Sector) 15.00 4.50 G
Second Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) - 0.28 G
Second Road Improvement (Sector) (2nd Supplementary) - 4.04 G
Second Road Improvement (Sector) (3rd Supplementary) - 2.14 G
Transport Sector Development 12.00 30.00 G
Sri Lanka North East Community Restoration and Development II
(Supplementary)
- 7.28 G
Tonga Nuku'alofa Urban Sector Development 6.06 6.44 G
Vanuatu Port Vila Urban Development 5.00 4.50 G
Port Vila Urban Development 5.00 26.50 G
Viet Nam Greater Mekong Subregion Flood and Drought
Risk Management and Mitigation
45.00 5.89 G
Health Human Resources Sector Development Program 30.00 11.00 G

- = nil.
a Loan, grant, or blend.
b C = commercial cofinancing, G = grant cofinancing.
c The $1 billion limit for ADB's Regional Trade Finance Program (TFP) approved by the Board of Directors in 2009 is the maximum exposure TFP can assume at any one point in time. This limit has never been breached. Because maturities under TFP transactions tend to be short - on average less than 180 days - TFP exposure can revolve (be re-used) within a year. This explains how TFP's exposure from 2009 to 2012 was greater than its $1 billion limit without actually breaching the limit at any one point in time.

Investment Projects Cofinanced with New Zealand, 1 January 2008 - 31 December 2012

Country Project ADB Amounta
($ million)
Cofinancing Amount
($ million)
Type of Cofinancingb
Papua New Guinea Improved Energy Access for Rural Communities  - 2.50 G
Solomon Islands Domestic Maritime Support (Sector) (Supplementary) - 2.50 G
Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) 3 - 0.89 G
Second Road Improvement (Sector) (Supplementary) - 0.36 G
Transport Sector Development 12.00 30.00 G
Vanuatu Interisland Shipping Support Project 10.82 12.60 G

- = nil.
a Loan, grant, or blend.
b G = grant cofinancing.