Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene Africa water, Sanitation May-June2015 Vol. 10 No.3 | Page 9

NEWS in brief Around Africa African Development Bank (AfDB) Group The project aims at achieving the Seychelles 2008-2030 Water Development Plan (SWDP) target supported by the African Water Facility (AWF), which is hosted and managed by AfDB. Currently, the country can only meet about 60% of its potable water needs due to limited storage capacity, increased demand for housing construction, and water losses along the network. Water shortages are common in Mahe, the Seychelles’ largest island, especially during the dry seasons when water rationing is enforced. The project would: (a) Improve water supply services through reduction of the number of days when water is rationed; and (b) Increase water production capacity to cover areas in the island’s northern region. MRU) countries with fragile health and economic systems and recent histories of civil war or political instability, and caused severe development setbacks. In launching this program, our two institutions acknowledge that the Ebola virus outbreak has worsened the limited human resources capacity situations in the region. Closer harmonization of all aspects of our assistance will help the countries implement their own post-Ebola recovery programs and also allow them to tape into the expertise that exist in our two institutions. Global Environment Facility (GEF) supports The project is anchored in the country’s Medium Term climate resilience in Uganda National Development Strategy 2013-2017 (MTNDS). The strategy focuses on strengthening the foundations of economic growth; improving the quality of life; and ensuring environmental sustainability. It is in line with the Bank’s adjusted Seychelles 20112015 Country Strategy Paper (CSP), which focuses on infrastructure development, concentrating solely on the water infrastructure sub-sector. The CSP is keen on enhancing the country’s water storage capacity, allowing it to better respond to climatic variability and the increasing water demand. It will also help to promote economic growth by reducing overreliance on desalination and improving social development by increasing access to water and sanitation. The Bank’s intervention will also contribute to greater diversification and competitiveness of the Seychelles economy. Direct beneficiaries of the project are the water users on the island of Mahe whose demand is projected to increase by 130% by 2030. Domestic, industrial and touristic use, which currently accounts for 36%, 11 % and 5% of the total water demand, are expected to increase by 140%, 400% and 190% respectively. The main impact of the project will be the improvement in quality of life and reliability of water services for household, industrial, commercial activities and tourism, especially in the dry seasons. The funding comprises US$ 20.60 million ADB loan and US$ 1.40 million grant from the Middle Income Country Technical Assistance Fund. The Seychelles government will provide the remaining US$ 3.995 million. 8 Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene • May - June 2015 The African Development Bank Board approved an additional financing of US $8.37 million (on March 4, 2015 from the Global Environment Facility’s (GEF) Least Developed Countries Fund (LDCF)[1] for the Water Supply and Sanitation Programme (WSSP), already financed by the Bank. The GEF financing will increase the resilience of the natural environment and the physical infrastructure of vulnerable drought and flood prone districts in Eastern Uganda. The programme is designed to build resilience in the face of a changing climate and adverse weather conditions, in particular increasingly frequent flooding conditions, thereby enhancing economic, social and climate resilience. The project will strengthen water and sanitation infrastructure – the development of which is indispensable for consolidating sustained and diversified growth in the region – and will mainly focus on rural and peri-urban water development support. Reflecting projected climate changes in Uganda, and related priorities identified in the country’s National Adaptation Programme of Action (NAPA), ѡ