ADF GIVES ZAMBIA LOAN OF $13.2MILLION
By Daily News Reporter
More than 460,000 people will soon have access to improved
water and sanitation due to a loan of $13.2 million from the African
Development Fund
The project is being supported by the European Union, the
Bank Group’s strategic partner, with a grant of $6.05 million through their
Nexus Energy and Water Programme for Zambia
The Board of
Directors of the African Development Fund granted a loan of $13.2 million to
Zambia in Abidjan on 17 July 2024 to implement innovative measures and improve
access to drinking water, sanitation and hygiene for 460,000 people in Kabwe
and Bauleni. The project also aims to strengthen the resilience of the
beneficiary populations to the effects of climate change.
In addition to the funding from the African Development Bank
Group’s concessional loans window, the project is being supported by the
European Union, the Bank Group’s strategic partner, with a grant of $6.05
million through their Nexus Energy and Water Programme for Zambia, a
transformative initiative under the European Union's Global Gateway strategy.
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“The project aims to improve access to better-quality water
and sanitation services in the town of Kabwe (in central Zambia) and Bauleni (a
district of Lusaka city) and increase the operational and financial efficiency
of water and sanitation providers in Lukanga (Centre) and the capital, Lusaka,”
explained Raubil Durowoju, the head of the African Development Bank Group’s
Country Office in Zambia.
Among other things, the project plans to rehabilitate the
Mulungushi water purification plant in Kabwe (abstraction of water from the
river, pipework for untreated water, replacement of obsolete treatment and
pumping equipment) to relaunch production of 37,500 cubic meters of drinking
water per day. It also plans to improve water transport and distribution pipe
networks, with an extension of over 70 km, and to build and equip five
boreholes in the catchment areas of Kalulu (in the south-west) and Mukobeko
(Centre) in Kabwe town. The project will use renewable energy technologies and
introduce innovative measures, such as smart meters, to reduce operating costs
through the installation of energy efficiency equipment in the water production
and supply system.
It will collaborate with partners such as the United Nations
Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to strengthen the provision of water, sanitation and
hygiene services and also raise awareness around integrated nutrition and
hygiene services, climate resilience, waste and water management among at least
10,000 people.
The African Development Bank’s long history in the water
sector in Zambia makes the institution a unique partner in supporting the
Zambian government’s implementation of the project. The Bank has supported
Zambia’s water sector since the late 1970s. Its first intervention, in 1979,
was a water and sanitation project in five provincial centres that aimed to
improve services in the towns of Choma, Kalomo, Livingstone and Monze in the
south of the country. Since then, the Bank has supported a total of 14 projects
to improve the long-term security of water supply and sanitation services in
Zambia. (Copyrights Reserved)
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