Ethiopia Gets Loan To Provide Water and Sanitation To 3m People

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Ethiopia Gets Loan To Provide Water and Sanitation To 3m People

The African Development Bank (AfDB) Group and Ethiopia signed a loan and grant agreements to the tune of $5.6 million for additional resources to Ethiopia’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Program.

 

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The Bank’s support focuses on the rural and pastoralist areas and is timely in the light of the drought that is being experienced in the horn of Africa. In 2014 across Africa the Bank Group approved operations in the water supply and sanitation sector amounting to $390 million, including special funds transactions.

The program includes mechanisms to significantly boost livelihoods and resilience to climate change in the affected communities. The One Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Program seeks to improve access to water supply and sanitation in Ethiopia, benefiting about 3 million people who will get access to water supply and sanitation facilities.

These resources complement the initial funding of US $91 million extended to Ethiopia for the same project in September 2014.

The program envisages the construction and rehabilitation of 7,805 schemes. It will mean that 3 million people will get access to water supply and sanitation facilities. The project is located in all the nine regions of the country, across 177 districts where there are shortages of water which has affected the health of rural people. As well as addressing the lack of water and poor sanitation, the work will address the problem of diseases caused by water shortage such as typhoid and amoebic dysentery.

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Village in rural Ethiopia 

Ethiopians in rural areas spend a lot of time searching for water for domestic use and for livestock. In the dry seasons, in particular, people cover long distances (over 5 kilometres) to get to the nearest water source.

Reports show that In Ethiopia 43 percent of Ethiopians lack access to safe water and 72 percent lack access to improved sanitation, according to Water Of those who lack access to improved sanitation, a staggering 28 million practice open defecation.

In rural Ethiopia, many women and children walk over 3 hours to collect water, often from shallow wells or unprotected ponds they share with animals, according to a survey by Water.org.

Recurring droughts result in famine, food shortages, and water-related diseases, as people are forced to rely heavily on contaminated or stagnant water sources.

Read more: New Business Ethiopia

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