The scope of Britain's Islamic finance market is widening with several initiatives from the government and private sector, although the country is about to lose European Islamic Investment Bank, one of its six full-fledged Islamic banks. Last week a government official said the central bank would look into developing a liquidity management tool for use by Islamic banks, while Britain's export credit agency expects to guarantee sukuk for the first time next year, an issue by a customer of European plane maker Airbus. Taken together, the new official initiatives seem likely to create a more benign environment for Islamic finance, allowing banks to operate more flexibly and efficiently, and therefore more cheaply.