Niger is keen to import Indian rice milling machines — and get advice on how to drill for oil.
South Africa welcomes Indian investment to build hotels ahead of the 2010 World Cup soccer tournament. And Ethiopia wants help from India for its highway projects.
African countries are increasingly looking to India, as well as China, for help developing their economies — moves that could significantly shape the future of global trade flows.
”We want to learn from India’s experience,” said Amadou Dioffo, managing director of Sonidep Petrol and Gas Company of Niger. ”Like us, India also has a colonial past. We want to know how and why it is doing so much better now.”
For India, these opportunities come as its economy is booming and its companies are aggressively scouting for new markets and new resources.
Last week, about 300 business delegates from 35 African countries descended on New Delhi to explore partnerships.
The three-day conclave discussed projects worth $17-billion from oil exploration and construction contracts to software and health care services, said the Confederation of India Industry that hosted the meetings. The first such conclave held last year discussed $5-billion in joint projects.
Even if a quarter of these projects come to fruition, it would significantly boost India’s trade with Africa, which totalled $11,8-billion for the fiscal year until March,
and is growing at about a 25% annually in recent years.
”We have a new synergy between Africa and India. The process is at work and is moving steadily,” said Tarun Das, a top official at the Confederation of Indian Industry, the country’s largest business grouping.
But there is competition from China, which is stitching up deals with African governments at a pace that has unnerved the region’s traditional partners, its former European colonial rulers, as well as the United States.
India says it is not competing with China, and that Africa offers plenty of opportunity for both countries.
India’s expertise in information technology, inexpensive medicines, and low-cost manufacturing make it an attractive source of partnerships for African nations as they try to modernise their economies.
Officials from Niger discussed importing rice milling machines, Dioffo said. They also talked oil.
Niger has oil reserves, but can’t explore them, and has to depend on imports, he said. Indian oil companies, always on a quest for energy assets, can help, Dioffo said.
In neighbouring Nigeria, India’s state-run Oil & Natural Gas is already investing $6-billion to build a power plant and railroads in return for stakes in oil fields.
Zimbabwe’s Trade and Industry Minister OM Mpofu said his government could even consider allowing Indian participation in mining for uranium — a much-needed resource for energy-hungry India and its efforts to boost nuclear power generation.
”We view this relationship as one of mutual trust,” Mpofu said.
”It has no colonial baggage. It is more balanced.”
India is also developing an e-connectivity project to link Indian education and health institutes to remote learning and medical centres in Africa.
Still, only a handful of African countries account for the bulk of India’s economic engagement with the region.
Tata Group, Ranbaxy Laboratories and Kirloskar Brothers — the top Indian players in Africa — have mostly focused on markets in South Africa, Nigeria, Egypt and Kenya.
The Tata Group’s interests span from automobiles to steel and software, while Ranbaxy is a key supplier of generic HIV/Aids drugs and Kirloskar Brothers mostly exports generator sets.
Chinese companies, meanwhile, have moved swiftly to secure metal and mineral supplies from across the region.
Beijing has also been giving loans to cash-strapped African governments, raising concerns that such lending could burden some African nations with enormous debts soon after many Western donors agreed to forgive their loans.
India has also started extending loans to Africa. At the New Delhi conclave, the government announced new loans taking its cumulative aid to Africa to $1,37-billion.
”This financial support helps Indian firms develop a long-term understanding of the realities and development priorities of Africa, which will in turn lead to increased commercial and business tie-ups” for them, said Anand Sharma, India’s junior foreign minister.
Looking toward the 2010 World Cup, the Tata aims to buy and build hotels there. Other Indian companies such as Larsen Toubro and Afcons are exploring construction contracts.
Russell Curtis, the chief executive of Durban Investment Promotion Agency, said his agency was open to Indian participation in building stadiums as well. – Sapa-AP