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Nigeria’s water problems to receive attention in AfDB’s new 5-year strategy

To increase water security, foster sustainabl­e, green, inclusive growth continent-wide Meeting Nigeria’s basic water needs requires $23bn over 2020-30

- Ben Eguzozie

NIGERIA, WITH CRITICAL WATER problems, especially lack of access to pipe borne water, is among African countries set to reap big in the African Developmen­t Bank’s (AfDB) new five-year water strategy project which aims to increase water security in the continent by 2025.

According to Beth Dunford, AfDB’s vice president for agricultur­e, human and social developmen­t, the five-year strategy, approved by the bank’s board, aims to increase water security in Africa, and to foster its sustainabl­e, green and inclusive socio-economic growth and developmen­t.

For Nigeria, this could bring much relief to a country where premises with access to pipe-borne water declined from 12 percent in 1990 to only 2 percent in 2015, according to statistics. A World Bank report in 2017 said Nigeria’s urban area suffered a huge decline in access to pipe borne water from 32 percent to 3 percent within the same period (1990 – 2015).

According to the USAID, in 2020, water problems were more prevalent in the Northern parts of the country, where over 70 percent lack access to safe drinking water. Also, water has been blamed as the cause of farmers–herders’ conflicts which has claimed many lives, another report in 2018 said.

It was then estimated that meeting the basic water and sanitation needs in Nigeria will require an aggregate of $23 billion over 2020–30.

The AfDB water strategy 20212025 with project title: “Towards a Water-Secure Africa,” is a significan­t milestone for the bank in terms of seeing water developmen­t and sanitation as key components toward improving the quality of life for the African people.

Dunford said the strategy would help the African Developmen­t Bank Group expand its role as the continent’s partner, while promoting integrated developmen­t and management of Africa’s water sector. The strategy will guide the bank’s implementa­tion of its policy on water, which it approved earlier this year.

More than 100 bank stakeholde­rs provided inputs to develop the strategy, which the AfDB’s board lauded as exemplary.

Since 2010, the AfDB has invested an estimated $6.2 billion in water supply and sanitation services. At the end of October 2021, the bank’s active water sector portfolio stood at $5.02 billion, comprising 104 projects implemente­d in 40 countries, and five multinatio­nal projects.

The 2021-2025 water strategy’s four pillars underscore the importance of water and sanitation for socio-economic developmen­t; sustainabi­lity, resilience, and inclusivit­y; food production and nutrition; and hydropower. It aligns with the bank’s High 5s, and thus contribute­s also to the achievemen­t of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) and the African Union’s (AU) Agenda 2063.

“Water is a key enabler for many of the United Nations Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals, and the African Developmen­t Bank considers water to be essential for life, health, dignity, empowermen­t, environmen­tal sustainabi­lity, peace and prosperity,” said Osward Chanda, the bank’s director for water developmen­t and sanitation.

 ?? ?? L-R: Udoh Ubon, managing director, ASR Africa Initiative, in company of O’tega Ogra (right), general manager, corporate communicat­ions, BUA Group, presenting an award letter for a N2.5 billion Tertiary Healthcare System Support grant to Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State, towards the constructi­on of a Mother & Child Hospital at the state-owned Olabisi Onabanjo University at the weekend in Abeokuta.
L-R: Udoh Ubon, managing director, ASR Africa Initiative, in company of O’tega Ogra (right), general manager, corporate communicat­ions, BUA Group, presenting an award letter for a N2.5 billion Tertiary Healthcare System Support grant to Governor Dapo Abiodun of Ogun State, towards the constructi­on of a Mother & Child Hospital at the state-owned Olabisi Onabanjo University at the weekend in Abeokuta.

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