Hygiene, Sanitation and Water Fund
About 20 percent of Bangladesh’s population has no access to safe drinking water; some 40 percent are deprived of improved sanitation facilities. The Hygiene, Sanitation and Water Fund, set up in 2007 by the leading international development agencies, partners with competent local government institutions to provide efficient and state-of-the-art WatSan solutions for millions of Bangladeshi households. The present proposal undertakes to co-finance the successful Fund for the period of 2012 through 2015.
| Región/País | Tema | Período | Presupuesto |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Bangladesh |
Agua Governance Salud
Agua potable y saneamiento básico (WASH) (til 2016)
Descentralización Fortalecimiento del sistema sanitario |
01.12.2012
- 31.12.2017 |
CHF 10'510'000
|
- Direct beneficiaries: 50,000 people benefitting from new or restored safe water points and 250 community centres or schools benefitting from improved sanitation services
- Indirect beneficiaries: The population (800,000 people) of the 50 Upazilas benefitting from improved public management capacities.
- Local governments’ capacities for citizen-oriented public service delivery - in particular water supply, sanitation and hygiene related ones - are strengthened
- Less people in hard-to-reach areas are deprived of safe water supply and basic sanitation services and more people exhibit improved hygiene behaviour
- Informed policy makers, government officials and other Union Parishads use project lessons for improved policy framework and implementation
- Reaching out, since 2007, to almost 600 Union Parishad (lover level of elected government)
- Improved access to safe drinking water ensured for about 2.4 million disadvantaged people. These improved water points include 34,000 deep hand pumps, more than 200 rural piped-water systems (serving some 16’000 households) and other alternative options.
- About 4 million people have been reached with hygiene messages and 700,000 household latrines can today been labelled hygienic.
- HYSAWA Fund
-
Sector según clasificación del comité de ayuda al desarrollo de la OCDE ABASTECIMIENTO DE AGUA Y SANEAMIENTO
GOBIERNO Y SOCIEDAD CIVIL
SALUD
Sub-Sector según clasificación del comité de ayuda al desarrollo de la OCDE Abastecimiento de agua potable y saneamiento básico – sistemas menores
Descentralización / gobernanza local / democratización / rendición de cuentas
Política sanitaria y gestión administrativa
Temas transversales El proyecto tiene en cuenta la igualdad de género como tema transversal.
El proyecto tiene en cuenta la democratización, la buena gobernanza y los derechos humanos como tema transversal.
El proyecto apoya también mejoras en la organización contraparte
Tipo de ayuda Ayuda pública al desarrollo (ODA)
Tipo de colaboración Cooperación bilateral
Modo de financiación Ayuda no reembolsable
Tipo de ayuda Contribución a proyectos y programas
Ayuda ligada/no ligada Ayuda no ligada
Número de proyecto 7F08444
| Contexto |
Lack of access to safe drinking water or improved sanitation services for high proportions of the Bangladeshi population, in particular in the hard-to-reach areas in the Southern districts, remains a key development challenge and major obstacle to reaching the MDGs by 2015. The Hygiene, Sanitation ad Water Fund, set up in 2007 by DANIDA and co-financed since 2010 by AusAid, is registered as a non- profit enterprise overseen by a board under the chairmanship of the Local Governance Division. |
| Objetivos |
Contribute to equitable development and poverty reduction through effective, accountable and inclusive local public service provision |
| Grupos destinarios |
|
| Efectos a medio plazo |
|
| Resultados |
Resultados de las fases anteriores:
|
| Dirección / Officina Federal responsable |
COSUDE |
| Crédito |
Cooperación al desarrollo |
| Contrapartes del proyecto |
Contraparte del contrato ONG internacional o extranjera |
| Presupuesto | Fase en curso Presupuesto suizo CHF 10'510'000 Presupuesto actual suizo ya emitido CHF 10'309'903 |
| Fases del proyecto |
Fase 2
01.12.2017
- 30.06.2021
(Completed)
Fase 1 01.12.2012 - 31.12.2017 (Completed) |