WB Funds Water Supply, Environmental Sanitation Project in Vietnam

On May 26, the World Bank’s Board of Executive Directors approved $119 million in additional financing for an ongoing project to respond to key urban development challenges focusing on assuring water supply and wastewater needs of selected urban areas in Vietnam. The additional financing for the Vietnam Urban Water Supply and Wastewater Project will mostly be used for a wastewater and drainage subproject for Binh Duong province. It will also cover cost overruns due to the appreciation of the US dollar, and provide technical support to the Ministry of Construction to prepare a new water supply investment in the Mekong Delta. Up to 65,872 households with 450,382 people will be connected to clean water sources as a result of the financing, and up to 312,051 urban dwellers will benefit from improved sanitation. “We are very pleased to see this additional financing approved by our Board of Directors. With this, achievements under the original project will be further consolidated and sustained, and more people in Binh Duong, in southern Vietnam, will enjoy better wastewater and drainage services.” said Achim Fock, the World Bank’s Acting Country Director for Vietnam. The additional financing includes a credit of $50.0 million from the International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank Group’s concessional financing window for low-income countries, and a loan of $69.0 million from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the World Bank Group’s lending arm for middle-income countries. The original project, which was approved by the World Bank’s Board in May 2011, sponsored seven water supply and seven wastewater subprojects in 10 provinces, with an average population size of 100,000 in the urban centers. (vov.vn May 27)