The Board of Directors of the Nordic Development Fund (NDF) has approved $8.8 million in grant funding to the African Water Facility (AWF).
This is expected to bolster investments in COVID-19 recovery and preparation for investment in water supply, sanitation, and integrated water resources management projects in the Sahel and the Horn of Africa.
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The proposed program advances an existing partnership of the African Development Bank, the AWF, the NDF, Denmark and other potential donors aimed at slowing and preventing transmission of COVID-19.
The AWF is a Special Fund established in 2005 by the African Ministers’ Council on Water (AMCOW) and hosted and administered by the African Development Bank.
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The NDF, a Nordic international finance institution established by Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden in 1988, focuses on the intersection of climate change and development in lower-income and fragile countries.
What they are saying
Karin Isaksson, Managing Director of NDF said:
- “We are very pleased to build and leverage on our relationship with the AWF to support Build-Back-Better and Greener, climate-resilient approaches. We also welcome the possibility to provide access to Nordic knowledge, technology, and potential partnerships on innovative water and sanitation solutions by financing a long-term consultant.”
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Wambui Gichuri, the Bank’s Acting Vice President for Agriculture, Human and Social Development stated:
- “This grant will enable the African Water Facility to fulfil its mandate of investment-ready project preparation and its climate-resilient approach to interventions in water supply, sanitation, and integrated water resources management. The Bank is particularly pleased that the program will place a special emphasis on the needs of poor, underserved and displaced persons, as well as on gender equity in access to water and sanitation, and facilitating job creation for youth and women.”
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What you should know
- The AWF assists African countries to mobilize financing and apply the funds to address water supply and sanitation needs, to enable the countries meet the African Water Vision 2025, as well as water-related Sustainable Development Goals.
- The funds will support AWF’s COVID-19 Recovery Through Water and Sanitation in Africa program, an initiative that relies on a climate-resilient approach to prepare investment in water sector projects that will benefit the vulnerable and underserved poor urban communities, including the displaced, in the two targeted regions.
- The program’s estimated budget is $34.6 million, of which the Danish government will contribute a grant of $23.8 million.
- The Bank and AWF will provide a grant of $1.1 million. Governments in the targeted areas are expected to provide in-kind contributions.
- The Nordic Development Fund is a partner in a number of ongoing Bank trust funds, including the ClimDev Special Fund(link is external) and the Off-Grid Energy Access Fund(link is external).
- NDF has previously extended grant funding to AWF to finance a call for proposals for preparation of a climate-resilient water infrastructure and water resource project in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- In the target countries, the average rate of access to safely managed drinking water facilities is 53.8%; the average rate of access to safely managed sanitation facilities is 23.4%; and the average proportion of population with handwashing facilities at home is 22.4%.
- This situation constrains the use of water and sanitation as a measure to contain the spread of COVID-19 and other water-related infectious diseases
- The Sahel part of Africa includes from west to east parts of northern Senegal, southern Mauritania, central Mali, northern Burkina Faso, the extreme south of Algeria, Niger, the extreme north of Nigeria, the extreme north of Cameroon and Central African Republic, central Chad, central and southern Sudan, the extreme north of South Sudan, Eritrea, and the extreme north of Ethiopia.
- Horn of Africa is the easternmost extension of African land. The region that is home to the countries of Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia.