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Nabsamruddhi, Collaboration

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Collaboration is strengthening our outreach: Bonani Roychoudhury

Renjini Liza Varghese


Bonani Roychoudhury, Managing Director, Nabsamruddhi, believes that collaboration is vital to reach WASH lending to the last mile. In the second part of the interview with Renjini Liza Varghese, she explains the importance of collaboration and the role each partner has played in the organization’s growth.

Q. There are unreached geographies. What is your plan to tap these markets?

We are covering mostly rural areas, especially tier-5 and -6 towns and villages. But there are unreached areas; for example, if you look at the northeast, Manipur has been covered. There are regions in the NE where a village has a common toilet which is not being used. It is a socio-cultural issue. A lot of canvas has to be covered. The rest of rural India is very aspirational. So, we are reaching out to partners in these untapped geographies, and the response is very encouraging.

Q. You follow a collaboration model to reach the last mile. What are the parameters in place while choosing a partner?

We have three sets of partners, first the high-rated ones with whom we are already working within other segments. In addition, we check whether they have worked in WASH, have the ability to take it forward, and have the manpower (team) to manage the WASH portfolio.

For those partners who have not handled WASH, we help them in capacity building through Water.org and make them future-ready. If that also doesn’t work, then we go with co-lending, where we will pick up 80% of the risk. In our experience, WASH loans witness almost 100% repayment.

The second is the mid-segment, which is unrated to BB +, where we support the entities through securitization of WASH pools.

The third segment comprises unrated entities with an AUM of less than Rs 100 cr for whom we have a special dispensation to finance under WASH. Here, we assess them basis their financial strength, past work, and reputation. Interestingly, these entities already have a good body of work in the social segment, which is encouraging.

Q. How have your partnerships evolved over the years?

The key sectors covered under our WASH lending include microfinance, MSME, and housing. Of the 22 partners, 15 are NBFC MFIs (few prominent names being Annapurna, Satya, Sonata, Pahal, Muthoot Microfinance), 4 are section 8 companies/societies in the MF sector (FWWB, Cashpor, Sahyog, Sanghamithra), 1 is a NBFC ICC in the MSME sector i.e. Ugro capital and 2 are HFCs (Aviom and IFL Housing).

The end use encompasses toilet loans, drinking and running water solutions, hygiene products, rainwater harvesting, WASH product manufacturing, trading, retailing, servicing, and waste management, including FSTPs and STPs, among others.

These 22 entities have been provided 30 credit facilities cumulatively exceeding Rs. 200 Crore for on-lending towards the WASH segment by NSFL (of which 93% of the disbursements were made in the last 2 years).

I would also like to highlight that NSFL provides WASH loans at concessional rates, by not only bypassing the concession availed from NABARD but further discounting the interest rate to support the segment.

Q. What are the major challenges?

As far as microfinance lending is concerned, we have not faced many challenges. However, challenges arise when it comes to financing WASH MSMEs through NBFC-ICCs who are not convinced about the need for WASH financing. It is also difficult to identify them and source such loans. All the same, financing of MSME is critical to ensure innovations in product and service delivery as well as to reduce time and costs in WASH delivery.

Q. Women get hit the maximum in a climate disaster event. Do you have any products designed for climate disasters?

Climate risk and mitigation are covered under our green and wellness finance. RE is under mitigation. We are looking at climate-resilient toilets under WASH. We are encouraging partners to innovate to address these challenges. Any climate event (floods) leads to contamination and we need the participation of stakeholders to develop products to address these risks.

Retrofitting of toilets alone requires Rs 61,000 cr of financing, according to the Ministry of Jal Shakti estimates. But the ticket size will be small, as low as Rs 15,000 and may be considered unviable by lenders. But it is an important project and a critical requirement. Let me draw a parallel. The piped water initiative of Jan Jeevan Mission, ‘Har ghar nal se jal’ is a success because of the high volume of data. The full benefit can be seen only when these pipes are connected to the kitchen and toilets directly. The loan for retrofitting of toilets, if combined with piped water connection, may require Rs 40,000 to Rs 50,000 that can be met by a loan – this can resolve the small ticket size issue.

We have asked all partners to consider exploring the opportunity which we will support with the bulk loan.

Q. What is the solution?

NBFC ICCs and NBFC Factors need to come in here. We are even suggesting creating a sourcing body for such loans.

There is scope to fund MSMEs for community-level solutions through contracts from ULBs and GPs- funding for community borewells, water harvesting structures, waste management, sewage and faecal sludge treatment plants (STPs, FSTPs), community toilets, hand wash and drinking water facilities, climate risk adaptation measures. These are mostly undertaken in PPP mode—through SPVs, contractors and sub-contractors. Support from bodies such as the Toilet Board, India Sanitation Coalition, National Faecal Sludge and Septage Management Alliance (NFSSM) and other coalitions in connecting the stakeholders, as aggregators, accelerators, incubators, etc., is critical here.

Delayed payments pose a significant challenge for MSMEs undertaking community-level WASH projects. There is a need to explore receivable financing, factoring, the TReDS platform, and third-party guarantees, influenced by RBI’s revised guidelines.

Q. Do you have enough products to cover the expected demand? What is the way forward?

We have three products: the term loan, the PTC and the loan to unrated entities. But going forward, we know that the low-hanging fruit is co-lending. We will launch that shortly. We are also exploring other structured products, such as partially guaranteed loans, pool loan issuances and supply chain financing (working capital financing). Two of these products will be rolled out in the current fiscal, and the balance will be launched in FY25.

Q. As you look at co-lending, would you consider joining hands with any underwriters for health insurance issuance? Health insurance coverage is much less than the world average?

We haven’t thought about it. But it is a good suggestion; we will surely consider exploring it. But, the premium needs to be affordable for the underlying borrowers.

 

 

 


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Nabsamruddhi

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Nabsamruddhi Champions WASH Loans to Lead Sustainable Finance

Renjini Liza Varghese


WASH lending has opened opportunities and also poses challenges for lending entities and financial institutions. Nabsamruddhi has also taken a giant leap. Bonani Roychoudhury, Managing Director, Nabsamruddhi, details the company’s strategy and the significance of WASH lending in an exclusive interview with Renjini Liza Varghese. This is the first of a two-part series in which WriteCanvas decodes the nitty-gritty of WASH lending.

What is WASH lending?

It is an acronym for Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene. In line with a recent WHO report, the ecosystem has a collective responsibility to ensure that we accelerate action to make safe WASH a reality for all and focused efforts on the poorest and most disadvantaged.

If we were to move at the same pace as we move today, by 2030 – 1.6 billion people will still lack safe drinking water at home, 1.9 billion people will still lack hygiene services at home, and 2.8 billion people will still have unsafe sanitation at home.

The World Health Organization and the UN studies have flagged that unsafe water supply and sanitation cause an estimated 1.6 million deaths per year worldwide; diarrhoeal diseases account for 88 percent of global deaths due to unsafe water supply and sanitation. Water-related diseases are responsible for 80% of diseases and deaths in developing countries.

We must imbibe this realisation to sustain growth. We must look at the long term, at the big picture, and WASH is central to this central to ESG.

When did Nabsamruddhi’s WASH lending journey start? What is the progress over the years?

Nabsamruddhi’s WASH lending started in 2017. Back then, we just only one loan to a society in Andhra Pradesh for lending towards household drinking water solutions. This was followed by sporadic loans to CASHPOR and FWWB in 2018 and 2019.

We launched our WASH product in 2019. On October 2, 2020, NABARD introduced the Special Refinance Scheme during the WASH awareness campaign. This entailed concessional refinance, and the product received a boost.

However, it was in FY22, when NSFL identified Green & wellness finance as a focus area, that WASH emerged as a prominent sub-segment. The share of WASH in NSFL’s Green & wellness finance portfolio is ~60%. We have drawn the highest share (>90%) of NABARD’s special refinance facility.

How do green and wellness finance fit into this strategy?

At Nabsamruddhi, our focus is on green and wellness finance. We believe that the health of the planet and the individual are interlinked. The financial sector cannot sustain if the real sector (people) does not sustain. Here most of the underlying borrowers are women, and they become very central to our dialogues, actions and strategy. However, I would like to highlight that WASH lending is not our moral responsibility, but a sustainability measure.

Factors such as squalor and pollution from wastes and landfills, open defecation, climate risk in sanitation, and non-availability of potable and running water for households and small businesses, have an adverse impact on health of the underlying borrowers. This is a major factor in inhibiting their disposable income in view of workdays lost as well as the substantial medical expenses incurred. (which can sometimes be as high as Rs 20,000 to Rs 30,000) which is not affordable for these segments. When events like large medical bills impact the disposable income, the entire budget of the family gets affected. In such a scenario, we cannot create a sustainable ecosystem in the financial sector.

If we want to see marginalized India graduate, where the ticket size of a microfinance loan can be double of what it is today, it is important to double household income in real terms. It is obvious that we need to invest in health and wellness.

How has WASH evolved as a core business focus? What were the key demand drivers?

The outstanding loan today is ~150 crore. As regards the non-financial impact, we have covered ~40k underlying borrowers, of which 90% of whom are women. Over and above improvement in health, hygiene and quality of life, and an estimated 21k beneficiaries has been an annual increase of an estimated 21k in income.

After a lot of extensive research and intensive analysis, we zeroed down on green and health wellness finance as our core business focus. WASH, which was one of the core business focuses, emerged as a key demand driver, and our numbers improved. What was most gratifying was to see increased income in underlying borrower households both in the short and the long term on account of WASH financing.

Can you elaborate?

Here I can give the examples of 2 women borrowers of an MFI. Their principal business is weaving charpoys. We met them during our monitoring visit. They had availed WASH loan to install running water solutions in their homes. The resultant infrastructure saves them approx. 2 hours daily from fetching water – and has increased monthly income by Rs 3,000.

Interestingly, the project also saw a lot of capacity building within our team and our partners. We signed an MoU with Water.org and also co-partnered with Sadhana, that helped us to reach our target segment.

You mentioned green financing. What percentage is earmarked for the same?

Out of the total disbursement last year, we disbursed nearly 42% towards on-lending for the focus segments, and more than 36% of the total AUM of Rs. 1120 cr, were under these segments as on 31 March 2023. More than 60% of our green finance is towards WASH loans. We also supported awareness generation for these segments through participation in various panel discussions and workshops. Regarding the impact at ground level, the financial interventions of NSFL have enabled the ultimate beneficiaries to contribute to a reduction in total CO2 emission, an increase in annual household income & consequently, savings, improved health and hygiene, reduced health-related expenses, gender equity & empowerment.

Other than WASH, we are aggressively pursuing opportunities in solar rooftops, solar lighting in rural and in urban areas, and solar rooftops in the MSME segment. We have also funded energy efficiency machineries that are certified under energy savings. Another area of interest is the EVs. Although there are challenges in the EV segment, these will be ironed out soon.

90% of beneficiaries are women. Is that a conscious effort from Nabsamruddhi to target women as a lending point?

No, I wouldn’t say that. Our clients in WASH are mostly microfinancing institutions, and their borrowers are predominantly women. Even the HFC partners whom we work with, their borrowers are mainly women, as women have been found to have better repayment ethics.

Women are also more susceptible to climate risk today as they are responsible for food, water, caregiving, and WASH financing is one of the most effective ways of combating this. This fact is being recognized worldwide.

In fact, the G20 New Delhi Leaders’ declaration accepted the disproportionate impact of climate change on all women and girls and decided to accelerate climate action with gender equality at its core, under Driving Gender Inclusive Climate Action and resolved to Support gender-responsive and environment-resilient solutions, including water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) solutions, to build resilience to the impact of climate change and environmental degradation.

In Part 2, which will be published next week, WriteCanvas will discuss the collaboration and product strategy of Nabsamruddhi…

 


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