During the COVID-19 pandemic, China Exim Bank granted debt relief to the government of
Angola, although the precise scale of the relief was not publicly disclosed. In 2022, the bank entered into an agreement with Hong Kong–based
ESR Group to support investment in infrastructure projects across
ASEAN member states. In 2023, it provided financing assurances and maturity extensions as part of
Sri Lanka's sovereign
debt restructuring negotiations linked to an
IMF support program. The bank has also provided more than US$1 billion in loans to the
Maldives for infrastructure development, including airport upgrades, bridge construction, and port relocation projects. China Exim Bank has played a central role in financing major Sri Lankan infrastructure projects since the mid‑2000s. After the Sri Lankan government was unable to secure funding from the United States or India for the development of the
Hambantota Port, it turned to China for financing. In 2006, Sri Lanka and China agreed to encourage Chinese participation in the project and to use concessional Chinese loans for its development. Following meetings between Sri Lankan officials and China Exim Bank leadership, and a state visit to China by President
Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2007, China Exim Bank agreed to provide the project's initial major loan. In subsequent years, the bank remained a key creditor to Sri Lanka. In 2023, it granted extensions on debt repayments originally due in 2022 and 2023 as part of broader restructuring negotiations. == Capitalization and ownership ==