Fin4 dev final project- the angolan water for all programm Paulo Ringote
With the achievement of peace in Angola in 2002, the government had the possibility to guide the actions to improve the quality of life through the implementation of a multi-faceted and comprehensive program of public investments, including major investments on the water supply infrastructure.
Information for Cuyahoga County applicants to the State Capital Improvement Program
This presentation was shown at workshops on August 15 and 16, 2017.
http://www.countyplanning.us/services/grant-programs/state-capital-improvement-program/
Fin4 dev final project- the angolan water for all programm Paulo Ringote
With the achievement of peace in Angola in 2002, the government had the possibility to guide the actions to improve the quality of life through the implementation of a multi-faceted and comprehensive program of public investments, including major investments on the water supply infrastructure.
Information for Cuyahoga County applicants to the State Capital Improvement Program
This presentation was shown at workshops on August 15 and 16, 2017.
http://www.countyplanning.us/services/grant-programs/state-capital-improvement-program/
The need for allocation and management occurs when the uses become rival and trade-offs emerge.
Fundamentally the concept of benefit sharing becomes a good idea when the strategically selected and placed investments planned at a basin level is more profitable than when done at a country level.
Fin4 dev final project- the angolan water for all programm Paulo Ringote
With the achievement of peace in Angola in 2002, the government had the possibility to guide the actions to improve the quality of life through the implementation of a multi-faceted and comprehensive program of public investments, including major investments on the water supply infrastructure.
Given the recent strong economic growth as well as increasing income from extractive industries, the international community reduced is finance, and technical assistance, to support the facilities and infrastructure, the authorities are doing, specially in the water sector, what is now the most challenge for the future.
Canada’s Ecofiscal Commission’s latest report, Only the Pipes Should be Hidden, assesses how well-designed user fees can improve the financial and environmental sustainability of our municipal water and wastewater systems. These systems treat and deliver water for millions of Canadian households and businesses, and are vital to our health, the economy, and the environment. Building on the progress that many municipalities have already made, the report provides a set of 10 best practices that encourage water conservation, fund infrastructure, and improve our water quality.
In this webinar Jonathan Arnold will go through the findings and recommendations of the report, and answer questions.
Leveraging Private Sector Investments and Public Funds to Support Smart Growt...GrowSmart Maine
Why plan for growth and change, when it seems so much easier to simply react?
When there is a distinct and shared vision for your community - when residents, businesses and local government anticipate a sustainable town with cohesive and thriving neighborhoods - you have the power to conserve your beautiful natural spaces, enhance your existing downtown or Main Street, enable rural areas to be productive and prosperous, and save money through efficient use of existing infrastructure.
This is the dollars and sense of smart growth.
Success is clearly visible in Maine, from the creation of a community-built senior housing complex and health center in Fort Fairfield to conservation easements creating Forever Farms to Rockland's revitalized downtown. Communities have options. We have the power to manage our own responses to growth and change.
After all, “Planning is a process of choosing among those many options. If we do not choose to plan, then we choose to have others plan for us.” - Richard I. Winwood
And in the end, this means that our children and their children will choose to make Maine home and our economy will provide the opportunities to do so.
The Summit offers you a wonderful opportunity to be a part of the transformative change in Maine that we’ve seen these gatherings produce. We encourage you to consider the value of being actively involved in growing Maine’s economy and protecting the reasons we choose to live here.
Sudan workshop | Morocco Country Presentation (Part 2)ÖMER KILIÇ
The Public Private Partnership: An innovative solution for the development of irrigation infrastructure projects.
Case of Guerdane Project:
A project for the preservation of the Agriculture and Environment
An overview of the maintenance challenges ahead for Sitka's municipal road system, as it nears the end of its original service life. Created by Michael Harmon, Sitka Public Works Director, March 24, 2014.
The Economic Benefits of the Clean Ohio Revitalization Fund and the Future of...greaterohio
The Economic Benefits of the Clean Ohio Revitalization Fund and the Future of Brownfield Redevelopment in Ohio
Presentation by Lavea Brachman, Executive Director of Greater Ohio Policy Center, to the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association's Environmental Law Section on October 7, 2013.
Ghana Compact- Sanitation and water for all (swa) launch presentationEnoch Ofosu
Sanitation and Water for ALL: a Global Framework for Action- SWA - Ghana Compact.
To encourage sustained financing for developing countries most off-track to meeting MDGs on sanitation and water
The need for allocation and management occurs when the uses become rival and trade-offs emerge.
Fundamentally the concept of benefit sharing becomes a good idea when the strategically selected and placed investments planned at a basin level is more profitable than when done at a country level.
Fin4 dev final project- the angolan water for all programm Paulo Ringote
With the achievement of peace in Angola in 2002, the government had the possibility to guide the actions to improve the quality of life through the implementation of a multi-faceted and comprehensive program of public investments, including major investments on the water supply infrastructure.
Given the recent strong economic growth as well as increasing income from extractive industries, the international community reduced is finance, and technical assistance, to support the facilities and infrastructure, the authorities are doing, specially in the water sector, what is now the most challenge for the future.
Canada’s Ecofiscal Commission’s latest report, Only the Pipes Should be Hidden, assesses how well-designed user fees can improve the financial and environmental sustainability of our municipal water and wastewater systems. These systems treat and deliver water for millions of Canadian households and businesses, and are vital to our health, the economy, and the environment. Building on the progress that many municipalities have already made, the report provides a set of 10 best practices that encourage water conservation, fund infrastructure, and improve our water quality.
In this webinar Jonathan Arnold will go through the findings and recommendations of the report, and answer questions.
Leveraging Private Sector Investments and Public Funds to Support Smart Growt...GrowSmart Maine
Why plan for growth and change, when it seems so much easier to simply react?
When there is a distinct and shared vision for your community - when residents, businesses and local government anticipate a sustainable town with cohesive and thriving neighborhoods - you have the power to conserve your beautiful natural spaces, enhance your existing downtown or Main Street, enable rural areas to be productive and prosperous, and save money through efficient use of existing infrastructure.
This is the dollars and sense of smart growth.
Success is clearly visible in Maine, from the creation of a community-built senior housing complex and health center in Fort Fairfield to conservation easements creating Forever Farms to Rockland's revitalized downtown. Communities have options. We have the power to manage our own responses to growth and change.
After all, “Planning is a process of choosing among those many options. If we do not choose to plan, then we choose to have others plan for us.” - Richard I. Winwood
And in the end, this means that our children and their children will choose to make Maine home and our economy will provide the opportunities to do so.
The Summit offers you a wonderful opportunity to be a part of the transformative change in Maine that we’ve seen these gatherings produce. We encourage you to consider the value of being actively involved in growing Maine’s economy and protecting the reasons we choose to live here.
Sudan workshop | Morocco Country Presentation (Part 2)ÖMER KILIÇ
The Public Private Partnership: An innovative solution for the development of irrigation infrastructure projects.
Case of Guerdane Project:
A project for the preservation of the Agriculture and Environment
An overview of the maintenance challenges ahead for Sitka's municipal road system, as it nears the end of its original service life. Created by Michael Harmon, Sitka Public Works Director, March 24, 2014.
The Economic Benefits of the Clean Ohio Revitalization Fund and the Future of...greaterohio
The Economic Benefits of the Clean Ohio Revitalization Fund and the Future of Brownfield Redevelopment in Ohio
Presentation by Lavea Brachman, Executive Director of Greater Ohio Policy Center, to the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association's Environmental Law Section on October 7, 2013.
Ghana Compact- Sanitation and water for all (swa) launch presentationEnoch Ofosu
Sanitation and Water for ALL: a Global Framework for Action- SWA - Ghana Compact.
To encourage sustained financing for developing countries most off-track to meeting MDGs on sanitation and water
Ghana WASH Project: Mapping Our Water and Sanitation Impacts in GhanaGhanaWASHProject
The Ghana Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Project is a USAID-financed project at work in five regions in Ghana. Learn about our project map, through which we are mapping our water and sanitation impacts, and providing more accountability and transparency.
The USAID Ghana WASH Project: Sharing Our ExperiencesGhanaWASHProject
Presentation by the USAID-funded Ghana Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Project as part of the USAID Joint Dissemination Workshop in Accra, Ghana, February 19, 2014.
Water and Sanitation Sector Performance Report of Ghana, 2009 EditionEnoch Ofosu
This WASH sector report aims to assemble all sector information in one document and make it available to government, development partners, the media, the public, and all key decision-makers in the sector. The intention is to publish the status of the sector annually to help track achievements against set targets and support effective decision-making and policy formulation.
Environmental sanitation policy of GhanaEnoch Ofosu
The Environmental Sanitation Policy (Revised, 2009) is the outcome of reviews to address limitations of the old policy published in 1999. A result of nation-wide consultation among sector stakeholders, this new policy redirects our efforts five years to the to the MillenniumDevelopment Goals (MDGs) target year of 2015.
http://inarocket.com
Learn BEM fundamentals as fast as possible. What is BEM (Block, element, modifier), BEM syntax, how it works with a real example, etc.
Under the leadership of the DNA/MINEA, the government is engaged in an ongoing process to develop the PNAASR, using the lessons learned from the Water for All Program and other activities in the sector, as well as national programs and successful projects from the region and the world.
The design process of PNAASR took place during a period of three years 2012 - 2015, co-funded by the GoA and the African Development Bank.
Cowater International, Development Workshop Angola, in partnership with Burnside, was contracted to assist in the development of the PNAASR.
Water, sanitation and hygience (wash) in india 5th dec'16Dr. Suchitra Lisam
The PPT was given as technical session at the 2 days Annual Strategic planning and BSI project review meeting of Reckitt Benckiser funded WASH/BSI project of ADRA India (for UP, Bihar states)
Kenya Investment Benefits from the Nile Basin Cooperation_Nov2021.pdfPolycarp Otieno Onyango
Kenya Country Investment Benefits from the Nile Basin Initiative. A publication of the Nile Equatorial Lakes Subsidiary Action Program (NELSAP-CU) an investment arm of the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI)
Fin4 dev final project- the angolan water for all programm Paulo Ringote
With the achievement of peace in Angola in 2002, the government had the possibility to guide the actions to improve the quality of life through the implementation of a multi-faceted and comprehensive program of public investments, including major investments on the water supply infrastructure.
Given the recent strong economic growth as well as increasing income from extractive industries, the international community reduced is finance, and technical assistance, to support the facilities and infrastructure, the authorities are doing, specially in the water sector, what is now the most challenge for the future.
Pasig River Rehabilitation ADB-Evaluation-Study V Loan 1746.pdfABLoveria
Discusses the Pasig River Environmental Management and Rehabilitation Sector Development project funded by an Asian Development Bank loan, the target accomplishments, actual accomplishments, gaps, resettlement issues, improper use of funds, and other concerns.
Ganga had been and would remain integral and most important part of Indian ethics,culture and life itself.Hence it's perpetual and clean flow is important.
The African Development Bank in Action Activities in the water and sanitation sector in Ghana – November, 2010
1. This country profile was prepared by the Water and Sanitation Department (OWAS) of the African Development Bank.
Every effort has been made to present reliable and up to date information as of July 2010.
The African Development Bank in Action
Activities in the water and sanitation sector
in Ghana – November, 2010
Overview and key elements of interventions
The African Development Bank Group (AfDB) commenced operations in
Ghana in 1973.
It has invested over USD 1.6 billion on concessionary terms in all
sectors of the country’s economy.
In the water and sanitation sector, the Bank has financed two
projects, for close to USD 88.2 million.
The African Development Bank’s funding in the water and sanitation
sector is fully in line with the country’s Growth Poverty Reduction
Strategy Paper II and the Bank’s 2006 – 2009 Country Strategy for
Ghana;
The Bank’s current project portfolio includes two on-going water
supply and sanitation projects, accounting for almost 13 % of net
commitments. The objectives are to improve the access, quality,
availability and sustainability of water supply and sanitation services.
In addition to these, the Bank via the African Water Facility Trust
Fund (AWFTF) has recently approved three grants, two for projects and one for a study, all totalling
EUR 4.1 million
In line with the Bank’s Medium Term Strategy 2008 - 2012 and the Government’s new Medium
Term National Development Policy Framework (MTNDPF 2010 – 2015), it is anticipated that the
Bank will continue to be a key development partner in Ghana’s water and sanitation sector.
Ongoing projects
Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Sub Program for Ashanti Sub Region, Approved in 2004 (UA*
14.37 million).
The objective of the project is to increase access to safe water and sustainable sanitation in 6 districts of
the Ashanti sub region in an accelerated manner, thereby contributing to the achievement of the national
target of 85% for water supply and sanitation coverage by the year 2015 in consonance with the
Millennium Development Goals.
Infrastructure Provision: The project’s initial targets included the provision of: 823 boreholes and hand
dug wells with hand pumps; 2 rural piped systems; 20,517 household latrines, institutional latrines and
septic tanks; as well as the improvement of three water catchment basins. Due to savings, the project
was extended to 2011 and 900 extra boreholes to be drilled bringing total to 1,723 and 2 more rural
systems to be constructed to bring the total to 4;
Community Development: Community Water and Sanitation Committees and Water and Sanitation
Development Boards formed and trained for management of the facilities, latrine artisans, area mechanics
provided with training; communities in 6 districts of Ashanti sub region received Environmental health
sensitization campaigns and ITC; and
Sector Capacity Building: Ashanti Region Rural Water and Sanitation Team and 6 District Assemblies
provided with operational equipment and trained in contract management, monitoring and evaluation,
impact monitoring assessment and project management and accounting
The total cost of the project, is UA 14.37 million.
Accra Sewerage Improvement Project Approved in 2006 (UA 51.74 million).
The Project Objectives are : (i) To provide an improved and extended sewerage and sanitation system for
disposing of waste water from the city of Accra, in an environmentally and socially acceptable manner, to
2. This country profile was prepared by the Water and Sanitation Department (OWAS) of the African Development Bank.
Every effort has been made to present reliable and up to date information as of July 2010.
meet the demand up to year 2020; (ii) To strengthen the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) so that it can
operate and maintain the system on a sustainable basis.
The main components of the project are: a) Infrastructure provision consisting of construction of sewage
treatment plants to treat 12,358m3
of sewerage effluent per day, rehabilitation and extension of 63.1km
Sewerage Network and 147 public toilets and 37 septage reception tanks ; b) Institutional Strengthening
consisting of Staff training and institutional strengthening of Accra Metropolitan Assembly, supply of sewer
maintenance equipment; and c) project management
The project will impact 2.97 million people in urban and peri urban Accra.
The total cost of the project is UA 51.74 million.
Improved Sanitation and Water Supply Service Delivery to the Urban Poor in Ghana through
Tripartite Partnerships (TPP): Approved in September 2009.
The Objective of the project is to build national capacity for planning and delivery of pro-poor water,
Sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services for accelerating sustainable access to urban sanitation and water
supply.
Pilot infrastructure in the three towns of Ashaiman, Mankessim and Huni Valley to demonstrate the
participatory approach involving community based organisations, local government and the private sector
together with innovative technologies and approaches for more efficient and sustainable service provision
in poor urban areas. Local and national learning Alliances will improve the enabling environment for
replication and scaling up of successful approaches.
The total cost of the project is EUR 1.98 million.
Design for Reuse: Harvesting the Value of Effluent and Nutrients for Sustaining the Operation
of Sanitation Facilities: Approved in June 2010.
The Objective of the project is to demonstrate the benefits of the reuse of nutrients and water in
improving sanitation schemes in Ghana by shifting the design focus from disposal to productive reuse;
capturing the economic, social and environmental benefits that will provide incentives and help finance
robust sanitation schemes; and strengthening the human and institutional capacity for reuse-oriented
sanitation and preparing against climate variability.
The four value chains of reuse in irrigation, aquaculture in maturation ponds and the use of compost and
biogas will be studied and implementation plans elaborated for specific existing plants.
The total cost of the project is EUR 0.50 million.
Re-optimisation of Akosombo and Kpong Dams: Approved in July 2010.
The Objective of the project is to produce technically and economically
feasible reoperation plans which will retain existing benefits of Akosombo
and Kpong operations while reintroducing lost livelihoods and ecosystems
functions and generate knowledge for wider application. A reoperation
study, an experimental reoperation demonstration and monitoring and a
global learning program shall be implemented.
The total cost of the project is EUR 1.61 million.
* 1UA = 1 Unit of Account ≈ USD 1.5 as of September 2010
Akosombo dam