Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank

India: Green Affordable Housing Finance with IIFL Home Finance

Last update: Nov 12, 2025 Last update: Nov 12, 2025

Details

Location:India
India
Status:Approval
Sectors:Environment & Climate, Non-specialized Goods / Services, Macro-Economy & Public Finance, Civil Engineering
Languages:English
Contracting authority type:Financial service provider
Eligibility:Unknown
Budget: USD 100,000,000
Date posted: Mar 27, 2025

Attachments

Associated Awards

There are no awards associated with this tender.

Project cycle timeline

STAGES
EARLY INTELLIGENCE
PROCUREMENT
IMPLEMENTATION
Cancelled
Status
Programming
Formulation
Approval
Forecast
Open
Closed
Shortlisted
Awarded
Evaluation

Description

India: Green Affordable Housing Finance with IIFL Home Finance

SUMMARY

STATUS: Proposed
MEMBER: India
SECTOR: Urban
E&S CATEGORY: FI
PROJECT NUMBER: 000816

FINANCING

PROPOSED FUNDING AMOUNT: USD100 million
FINANCING TYPE: Nonsovereign

TIMELINE

CONCEPT REVIEW: November 28, 2023
APPRAISAL REVIEW/FINAL REVIEW: March 5, 2025

OBJECTIVE

To support access to affordable housing for low-income households and promote green affordable housing in India.

DESCRIPTION

The project proposes to provide debt financing of up to USD100 million or its equivalent in INR to IIFL Home Finance (IIFLHF) for on-lending to support acquisition or construction of affordable housing in India.

Out of the total proceeds, a part will be allocated to financing the acquisition of affordable housing for households in the Economically Weaker Segment (EWS) and Low-Income Group (LIG). Additionally, a certain percentage will be directed towards loans for acquisition or construction of green affordable housing.

ENVIRONMENTAL AND SOCIAL INFORMATION

Applicable Policy and Categorization: AIIB’s Environmental and Social Policy (ESP), including the Environmental and Social Standards (ESS) and the Environmental and Social Exclusion List (ESEL) is applicable to this Project. The Project is expected to have minimal adverse environmental and social (ES) impacts as the loan proceeds will be used for (i) lending to individual borrowers for the construction and acquisition of residential property units or (ii) to private residential property developers for financing the construction of small-scale residential developments (one to few apartment blocks) in line with the housing construction regulations in India. Therefore, the Project is placed in Category FI and is expected to have limited adverse ES impacts which are reversible and can be successfully managed using known good practices.

Environment and Social Instruments: To manage ES impacts and in accordance with the applicable laws and regulations of the Government of India and AIIB’s ESP, IIFLHF has established an ESG Policy and Sustainable Finance Framework (SFF) in addition to a set of internal policies, including Health and Safety Policy, Diversity and Inclusion Policy, among others. IIFLHF has also established a Fair Practices Code (FPC) to ensure responsible lending conduct and disclosures. These policies are complemented with practical tools such as Kutumb.

Environmental and Social Aspects: The main environmental aspects related to provision of loans to homeowners for purchase of green and/or affordable homes are related to occupational health and safety of using home appliances and use of building services. For loans related to builders for housing development, environmental aspects are extended to health and safety at construction and operation of the buildings, waste management, and resource efficiency during construction and operation. Land shall be acquired following market principles and a willing seller, willing buyer model. The Project will exclude sub-projects that involve properties built on land with legacy issues and disputes, land resulting from unlawful forced evictions, having adverse impacts on indigenous peoples and vulnerable groups, negative impacts on essential cultural heritage, significant degradation or conversion of critical habitats, and illegal construction that does not comply with applicable national and local laws and regulations. The ES risks and impacts are therefore expected to be limited to labor and working conditions, occupational health and safety aspects of using domestic home appliances and building services. AIIB will conduct prior review and approval of the first three sub-loans to corporate developers and all high-risk sub-loans.

Gender aspects: IIFLHF has adopted gender sensitive and inclusive corporate policies which are applied internally. IIFLHF has also established a policy on Prevention of Sexual Harassment and an Internal Complaints Committee (ICC) in accordance with the Sexual Harassment of Women at Workplace (Prevention, Prohibition and Redressal) Act, 2013. IIFLHF has adopted several gender sensitive initiatives such as gender inclusion indicators, and prioritization of loans disbursed to women homeowners/ co-owners.

Occupational Health and Safety, Labor and Employment Conditions. ES policies applied by IIFLHF as part of their ESG policy and SFF incorporate provisions for application of national Health & Safety and Labor and employment legislation across all the investments supported. Most project’s proceeds (in terms of number of sub-loans) will be used for acquisition of affordable housing dwelling by individual homeowners of disadvantaged social groups. Health and safety risks for that use of proceeds are of limited scale and limited to health and safety considerations of using domestic home appliances and building services. These projects, undertaken by private developers are typically of limited size with minimal adverse impacts, with most of financing is sought at advanced stage of development process when all the ES risks are already fully addressed.

Stakeholder Engagement, Consultation and Information Disclosure. IIFLHF has a strong stakeholder matrix and engagement plan. The identified stakeholders include (i) the customers, including women, from EWS and LIG category; (ii) civil societies / NGOs (iii) media; (iv) vendors and contractors; and (v) Regulators / Government. The ESG policy, SFF and other policy documents1 are available on IIFLHF’s website.

Project Grievance Redress Mechanism (GRM): IIFLHF has a well-established multi-pronged GRM that can be accessed via its website, physical branches, helpline number and dedicated call center. IIFLHF will require its corporate sub-borrowers to establish appropriate GRM at the sub-project level. Provision will also be made to inform Project-affected Persons (PAPs) and workers of the GRM’s availability, and AIIB's Project-Affected Peoples' Mechanism (PPM).

Monitoring and reporting arrangement: IIFLHF will regularly monitor ES performance of financed projects using agreed checklists and provide ES reports on the AIIB-financed portfolio annually based on agreed format. AIIB will supervise IIFLHF’s ES performance on a regular basis, including site visits to selected affordable housing sub-projects, as needed.

Contacts

Ajay Jaiswal
Position:Chief Operating Officer
Phone:
tender Background

About the Funding Agency

The Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) is a multilateral development bank (MDB) conceived for the 21st century for promoting infrastructure development in Asia. Through a participatory process, its founding members (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are developing its core philosophy, principles, policies, value system and operating platform. The Bank's foundation is built on the lessons of experience of existing MDBs and the private sector. 

AIIB is offering sovereign-backed and non-sovereign-backed financing (i.e. loans, guarantees, and equity investment). It does not have a concessional financing window, nor does it provide grants. AIIB does not provide financing to individuals.

About the Sectors

Environment & Climate

Focuses on protecting natural ecosystems, promoting sustainable resource management, enhancing climate resilience, and mitigating the impacts of climate change through conservation, adaptation, and low-carbon initiatives.


Key areas:
  • Environmental protection and conservation
  • Natural resource and ecosystem management
  • Climate change and environmental resilience

Non-specialized Goods / Services

Covers general goods and services that support daily operations, facilities management, and basic institutional needs.


Key areas:
  • Facility support services (cleaning, catering, maintenance)
  • Rental services (offices, venues, accommodation, parking)
  • Supply of basic goods and consumables
  • Office, household, visibility, and event-related supplies

Locations

India

India has been expanding transport (roads, railways, ports), energy (renewables and grid modernisation) and digital infrastructure to support rapid urbanisation, industrial growth and integration into global value chains. Through flagship initiatives such as the National Infrastructure Pipeline and PM Gati Shakti Master Plan, the government aims to reduce logistics costs, boost manufacturing competitiveness, and improve connectivity across regions. Public capital expenditure has risen sharply, with increased emphasis on public–private partnerships and climate-aligned investments, while mobilising financing through innovative funds and investor incentives. Key challenges include managing fiscal sustainability, improving project implementation efficiency and reinforcing institutional governance to attract long-term private capital at scale.

Nr. of tenders: 47576
Nr. of grants: 4166
Nr. of donors: 1179
Nr. of jobs: 325
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