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EBRD, EU, and UK upgrade wastewater services in Jordan

EBRD, EU, and UK upgrade wastewater services in Jordan
The grant agreements were signed by Gretchen Biery, EBRD Director for the Eastern Mediterranean region, Zeina Toukan, Jordanian Minister of Planning and International Cooperation and EBRD Governor for Jordan, and Raed Abu Soud, Jordanian Minister of Water and Irrigation, in the presence of EU Ambassador to Jordan Pierre-Christophe Chatzisavas and UK Ambassador to Jordan Philip Hall (photo courtesy EBRD).

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) has announced that it is supporting the expansion of Jordan’s sanitation infrastructure by extending a financing package worth US$30 million (EUR 28.5 million) to the Water Authority of Jordan (WAJ) for the construction of a new wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in West Irbid.

The financing package consists of an EBRD sovereign loan of up to US$ 19 million (EUR 18 million), signed earlier this year, along with an investment grant of up to US$8 million (EUR 7.2 million) from the UK Government under the High-Impact Partnership on Climate Action (HIPCA) and a EUR 2.75 million investment grant from the EU under its Neighbourhood Investment Platform.

We are very proud of our continued collaboration with the EU and United Kingdom in Jordan to help improve wastewater services in West Irbid, and we commend the Government of Jordan for its ongoing investments in core infrastructure. Working together, we are committed to improving Jordan’s municipal infrastructure, and this new wastewater facility will help deliver essential first-time wastewater services to the local community and refugees, contributing to the livelihoods of West Irbid’s residents and promoting sustainable water management in the region, said Gretchen Biery EBRD Director for the Eastern Mediterranean region.

Challenged by rapid population growth

Jordan is a severely water-scarce country and its municipal infrastructure is being challenged by rapid population growth and a significant number of refugees.

The new wastewater facility in Irbid, Jordan’s second-largest city, will improve and expand sanitation infrastructure services, benefiting up to 200,000 individuals by 2045.

It will connect the inhabitants of surrounding towns with wastewater services for the first time, significantly improving their health and environmental conditions.

The new wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in West Irbid will complement the ongoing construction of a wastewater network, which the EBRD has been supporting since 2018.

Together, these projects will help alleviate the pressure on the country’s infrastructure and promote the use of sustainable water resources. Once completed, the facility will have the capacity to treat 12,000 m3 of wastewater a day.

Minister of Planning and International Cooperation Zeina Toukan, expressed her gratitude to the EBRD, the UK, and the EU for their support of this vital service project and their continuous support for Jordan’s developmental priorities under the Economic Modernization Vision.

The project aims to improve the wastewater system sustainably and relieve pressure on infrastructure, ultimately providing sanitation services to towns included in the project, benefiting around 200,000 people across villages in West Irbid and surrounding areas. Additionally, the treated wastewater will be used as a sustainable source for irrigating agricultural lands around the plant and neighbouring areas, Minister Toukan explained.

The HIPCA was launched by the EBRD and partner governments in 2021, supported by Austria, Canada, Finland, Germany, South Korea, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Spain, the TaiwanICDF, the UK, and the USA.

Almost all countries today need to make the best use of their water, treating and re-using it, sometimes several times. This is especially true in this region. I am delighted the UK is contributing to this project which will help ensure that the water can be re-used and does not pollute the environment or the aquifers, said British Ambassador, Philip Hall.

Since the start of its operations in Jordan in 2012, the EBRD has provided more than EUR 2.2 billion in financing to 74 projects.

EU support for the West Irbid Wastewater Treatment Plant is part of a broader strategy to address water challenges in the north of Jordan. This project complements the West Irbid wastewater network project, which has been co-funded by the EU through an additional EUR 20 million grant. Jordan can count on our support to upgrade wastewater infrastructure across the country: the EU is currently co-financing the creation of six treatment facilities in Balqa, Madaba, West Irbid, Ramtha, Ghabawi, and Azraq, said Pierre-Christophe Chatzisavas, EU Ambassador to Jordan.

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