World Bank Kenya country director Diarietou Gaye. FILE
By Sandra Chao
The World Bank has given water service providers
within Nairobi County a grant of $4.33 Million (Sh371 million) to
increase access to water in informal settlements.
The grant facilitated by the multi-donor
partnership, Global Partnership on Output Based Aid (GPOBA), will see
16,000 households get connected to the main sewer line as well as have
safe water to drink.
World Bank Kenya country director Diarietou Gaye
said the partnership will enable low income residents to access the
essential services.
“The ultimate aim of this innovative financing
mechanism is to ensure improved and affordable water and sewerage
services for the urban poor in Kenya’s towns and cities,” she said
during the signing of the agreement with the government.
Nairobi City Water and Sewerage Company (NCWSC)
and the Athi Water Services Board will implement the social connections
project over three years, increasing access to an estimated 80,000
low-income residents by June 2017.
Some of the areas earmarked for the project include Kayole-Soweto, Matopeni-Spring Valley and Embakasi-River Bank.
“The subsidies will enable urban utilities and
planners to focus more on the needs of poor urban households and to
invest more in water and sanitation infrastructure within the
fast-expanding informal settlements,” she said.
The Sh371 million will help to subsidise up to 70
per cent of the cost of installing sewerage connections and cut the
price of getting clean water supply by 40 per cent for each household.
The unsubsidised portion can be financed by
deposits from the individual households, though eligible families can
get five year loans from NCWCS through a mobile-based system of billing
and payments. The company is expected to fund the project’s capital
costs estimated at $7.2 million (Sh618 million).
GPOBA manager Carmen Nonay said the project would
not only improve the health but also the productivity of the targeted
residents.
“Building on a successful GPOBA pilot for
community water projects financed by K-Rep Bank under its Maji ni Maisha
programme, this project scales up the use of OBA (output based aid) in
Kenya for improved sanitation, one of the less-tested sectors that GPOBA
is increasingly supporting,” Ms Gaye said.
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