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USAID and The Coca-Cola Company expand water and development alliance

Posted: 5 September 2013 | Coca-Cola | No comments yet

New investments support sustainable water & sanitation (WASH) service delivery…

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New Investments Support Sustainable Water & Sanitation (WASH) Service Delivery

Today at World Water Week in Stockholm, the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and The Coca-Cola Company announced support for new programs under their Water and Development Alliance (WADA) that will provide more than 190,000 people with improved clean water and/or improved sanitation services by the end of 2015.

As part of its first wave of new investments, WADA will support integrated approaches to clean water and sanitation service delivery in Africa where more than 300 million are without an improved water source and 630 million lack improved sanitation facilities. To address these challenges, WADA will support the development of infrastructure for clean water, sanitation and hygiene education for schools, clean water kiosks for communities, and the installation of sanitation infrastructure in schools and health clinics.

This joint investment is aligned with USAID and Coca-Cola’s shared focus on clean water provision as a means to help build healthy, sustainable communities. WADA, established in 2005, is operating under a refreshed investment strategy –the result of a comprehensive and successful evaluation of its programs. WADA’s new strategic direction combines the core strengths of Coca-Cola and USAID for greater impact and contribution to address international water challenges with a focus on water for health, the environment and productive use. This strategy is built on the core values of local ownership, institutional synergy, technical quality and transformational change. The partners are collaborating to develop a series of water programs with significant impact around the world.

Highlights of the work to be supported include a range of approaches that offer lasting clean water and sanitation services in partnership with communities and utilities to support government objectives, including:

  • Nigeria – At least 65,000 people will benefit from the installation of hand-pump boreholes, improved sanitation facilities, hand-washing stations and rain harvesters at schools and health care facilities. Communities will also be trained in the long-term maintenance of the infrastructure and water management committees will be offered capacity building services.
  • Zambia – The project will provide sanitation facilities and hygiene education in schools in peri-urban Lusaka, benefiting up to 50,000 school children. The project includes resource mobilization strategies to support the long-term operations and maintenance of the schools’ water, sanitation, and hygiene programs. It is also expected that this project will provide sustainable clean water access to up to 44,000 people through community water kiosks and a distribution network.
  • Ghana – More than 35,000 people will benefit from the construction of clean water kiosks and sanitation services to include the provision of total sanitation marketing campaigns.

“This important public-private partnership builds on our Agency’s new and first-ever Water and Development Strategy to improve health and food security across the world. Its programs represent the next generation of this vital alliance–helping families lift themselves out of poverty and communities onto a path towards sustainable development,” said Dr. Rajiv Shah, USAID Administrator.

“Water stewardship is a key priority for our business and we are committed to returning the water we use in our beverages and their production back to communities,” said Muhtar Kent, Chairman and CEO, The Coca-Cola Company. “We are pleased to launch the next phase of impact with one of our longest standing and most valued partners, USAID. Expanding our work together will help bring safe water to thousands of people in communities we serve and continue to bring us closer to meeting our replenishment goal.”

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