President of the Inter-American Development Bank Ilan Goldfajn yesterday paid a courtesy call on Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley where the first drawdown of a US$80 million loan to rehabilitate this country’s water sector was signed.
The loan agreement was signed by Minister of Planning and Development Pennelope Beckles and Goldfajn and overseen by Dr Rowley.
The official signing took place at the Diplomatic Centre of Trinidad and Tobago during the XI Annual Consultation of Caribbean Governors.
Last December the IDB announced that it had approved a US$80 million loan to boost the efficiency, quality, sustainability, and resilience of T&T’s drinking water supply and water security.
“As part of a US$315 million conditional credit line for the T&T National Water Sector Transformation Program, this initial operation will include institutional strengthening and capacity building to help the country’s Ministry of Public Utilities and its executing agency, the Water and Sewerage Authority (WASA), improve their governance and sustainable management of water resources,” the IDB stated in the release.
“The program will directly benefit an estimated 1,025,000 residents (310,665 households), plus an additional 279,500 residents (84,705 households) in surrounding communities. Approximately 16,841 business, agricultural, and industrial customers and charitable institutions in different supply areas will benefit as well,” it stated.
The program will support WASA’s operational, commercial, and technical management by providing access to innovative digital transformation tools and technologies and data-driven management systems.
“WASA’s services will be upgraded through network rehabilitation and optimisation, organisational development and capacity building, integrated water resources management, climate change and natural disaster risk management, and leveraging the IDB’s experience in water loss reduction projects. All of these actions promise to lower the agency’s operating costs and subsidies,” the IDB stated.
The program is aligned with the IDB Group’s country strategy for T&T 2021–2025, specifically the strategic objective of optimising digital service delivery by digitising operational processes and adopting smart technology for water infrastructure and related information and communications technologies.
The loan will be disbursed over the course of four years, with a 25-year repayment term, a 5.5-year grace period, and an interest rate based on the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR).
“It is expected that an estimated 1,025,000 people in targeted underserved communities will benefit from the new infrastructure to be built under the programme, with an additional 16,841 commercial, charitable institutions, agricultural and industrial customers also gaining access to improved water supply service,”the IDB stated yesterday..
Speaking to Guardian Media following the signing, IDB’s executive director Robert Le Hunte said the loan is part of a holistic plan.
Le Hunte said this first component had specific guidelines.
He said the meeting yesterday was “very encouraging.”
This is Goldfajn’s first visit to the Caribbean since he took office for a five-year term on December 19, 2022.
The IDB Group held its XI Annual Consultation with the Governors of the countries comprising its Caribbean Country Department and the President of the Caribbean Development Bank in Port-of-Spain.
Goldfajn concluded his first to T&T with a visit to the Ministry of Works and Transport (MoWT) National Traffic Management Branch in Caroni to view the enhanced digital systems and tools being used to manage road maintenance, congestion levels, crew deployment and provide an early warning system, which are being deployed under a partnership with the IDB and MoWT.