Development Bank CAF Pledges $10 Billion To Connect The Region
Key Facts
- The plan: CAF, the region's development bank, will invest $10 billion through 2031 in integration projects.
- The focus: physical and digital infrastructure, energy, intraregional trade, logistics and mobility.
- The pact: CAF and 14 regional bodies signed a declaration to turn integration plans into projects.
- The mechanism: they will hold an annual meeting to coordinate and track progress.
- Latin American impact: a push to knit fragmented economies together as global trade splinters.
Latin America's development bank will commit $10 billion through 2031 to regional integration, betting that closer ties can shield the region as global trade fragments.
What the Regional Integration Plan CoversCAF, the development bank for Latin America and the Caribbean, announced the $10 billion commitment at a regional forum in Cartagena, Colombia. The funds run through 2031. They are aimed at projects that physically and digitally connect the region's economies.
The target areas are broad. They include transport and digital infrastructure, energy, intraregional trade, tourism, innovation, logistics and mobility. The bank's chief, Sergio Diaz-Granados, called integration an imperative for development and competitiveness.
A Pact to Move From Words to ActionThe money came with a political signal. CAF and 14 regional organizations signed a declaration to speed up integration. The bank framed it as a shift from diagnosis to delivery.
As a first concrete step, they agreed to hold an annual convergence meeting. The forum is meant to coordinate efforts and track results.“Fewer diagnoses and more projects,” Diaz-Granados said.
Why NowThe push comes amid geopolitical tension and splintering global trade. CAF argues that tighter regional ties can help its members weather the turbulence. The aim is to give the region more weight in global supply chains.
The bank says the region is not starting from scratch. It cites lower tariffs since the 1990s, the Mercosur-European Union deal and new undersea data cables. The next phase, it argues, is execution.
Frequently Asked Questions What is CAF?It is the development bank of Latin America and the Caribbean, owned by member countries. It finances infrastructure and other projects across the region.
How much is being committed?CAF pledged $10 billion through 2031 for regional-integration projects, spanning infrastructure, energy, trade, logistics and mobility.
What did the declaration add?CAF and 14 regional bodies pledged to accelerate integration and to meet annually to coordinate. It is meant to move beyond planning toward concrete projects.
Connected CoverageFor more on the region's investment drive, see The Rio Times on Carlos Slim's $5 billion Mexico pledge and on Argentina's new investment incentives.
Read More from The Rio Times
- Carlos Slim to Invest $5 Billion in Mexico, Backing Sheinbaum Bolivia Denies Plans to Privatize Its State Companies Argentina's Milei Offers 30-Year Tax Breaks for New Industries
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment