• Thursday, April 18, 2024
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Nigeria gets $700m World Bank credit for urban-rural water hygiene

Nigeria spent N1.03 trillion on subsidies in 2021, according to data from the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC).

The World Bank on Thursday approved a $700 million credit for the Nigeria Sustainable Urban and Rural Water Supply, Sanitation, and Hygiene Programme (SURWASH).

In a statement on its website, the World Bank said the $700 million credit from the International Development Association (IDA) will provide 6 million people with basic drinking water services and 1.4 million people access to improved sanitation services.

The programme will deliver improved water sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services to 2,000 schools and healthcare facilities and assist 500 communities to achieve open defecation-free status.

These will be implemented as part of the Government of Nigeria National Action Plan (NAP) for the revitalization of Nigeria’s water supply, sanitation, and hygiene sector.

In 2019, approximately 60 million Nigerians were living without access to basic drinking water services, 80 million without access to improved sanitation facilities, and 167 million without access to a basic hand washing facility.

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In rural areas, 39 percent of households lack access to at least basic water supply services, while only half have access to improved sanitation and almost a third (29 percent) practice open defecation – a fraction that has marginally changed since 1990.

In recent years, the government of Nigeria has strengthened its commitment towards improving access to WASH services, spurred on by the need for Nigeria’s WASH sector to catch up with its regional counterparts.

This led to the government declaring a state of emergency in 2018 and launching the NAP aimed at ensuring universal access to sustainable and safely managed WASH services by 2030, commensurate with the SDGs.

The programme will support the NAP which is a 13-year strategy prioritizing actions within three phases: Emergency Plan, Recovery Plan, and Revitalization Strategy and also the Clean Nigeria: Use the Toilet Campaign which aims to have Nigeria free of open defecation by 2025.

“Given that access to WASH is an important determinant of human capital outcomes, including early childhood survival, nutrition, health, learning, and women’s empowerment – all of which in turn affect labour productivity and efficiency; the program’s centrality to the human capital agenda and its potential to influence key human capital outcomes cannot be overemphasized,” says Shubham Chaudhuri, World Bank country director for Nigeria.

“Participating states will be able to improve access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene which will help to keep more girls in school, create employment, and reduce open defecation, while developing greater resilience to the impact of climate change, as well as conflicts between different land and water users.”

The SURWASH Programme is performance-based and participation is open to all states in Nigeria based on their commitment to specific reforms in the sector.

The programme will support Nigeria to enact necessary policy reforms and incentivize state and local governments, service providers, technical assistance providers, and community-based organizations (CBOs) to effectively deliver sustainable services in the sector. It will support a package of investments to expand access to and increase the use of WASH services in urban, small towns and rural areas.