Yes, when an African corporate, bank or sovereign related borrower signs an agreement governed by English law without an establishment in England and Wales. English law dominates the continent's international finance documentation, and the process agent appointment is a standard condition across development finance, commodities and corporate lending.
English law across African finance
Syndicated and development finance facilities to borrowers in West, East and Southern Africa, commodity prepayment and offtake structures, ECA supported financings and sovereign linked borrowing are overwhelmingly documented under English law. Each overseas obligor, borrower and guarantor alike, is required to appoint an agent for service in England and Wales, with the letter of appointment sitting on the conditions precedent list before funds move.
Why the clause is non negotiable on the continent
Lenders' credit committees will not accept months of uncertainty around overseas service, and official service channels into many African jurisdictions are slow. The appointment gives them a domestic route to enforce, and gives the borrower immediate knowledge of anything served. Given facility sizes, the fee, from £125 per year or £480 for a five year fixed term, is a rounding error against the certainty purchased.
Appointing from Africa
Time zones across the continent overlap generously with the UK working day, so instructions typically confirm within 24 hours in live correspondence. Our team works in English, French and Portuguese, covering the continent's major business languages alongside local counsel, and invoices in USD, EUR or GBP with no UK VAT for overseas clients. Begin at the order form with your facility's document list.