Water Financing Partnership Facility Annual Report 2016
Aid, Australian; foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates; Netherlands, Kingdom of the | February 2016
Abstract
The Water Financing Partnership Facility (WFPF or the Facility) was established on 29 November 2006 to provide additional financial and knowledge resources from development partners to support the implementation of the Asian Development Bank’s (ADB) Water Financing Program, thus achieving the following targeted outcomes by 2020: (i) 500 million people with sustainable access to safe drinking water and improved sanitation, (ii) 170 million people with reduced risks to floods, and (iii) 95 million people with more productive and efficient irrigation and drainage services. The Facility’s overview and updated governance structure are provided in Appendix 1. This report covers the period January to December 2016 and presents the performance for the year against the annual work program and the cumulative performance to date measured against the Facility’s Design and Monitoring Framework (DMF) as revised in 2016 (see Appendix 2).
Citation
Aid, Australian; foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates; Netherlands, Kingdom of the. 2016. Water Financing Partnership Facility Annual Report 2016. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/10058.Keywords
Access To Water
Available Water
Demand For Water
Drinking Water
Drinking Water And Sanitation
Freshwater
Groundwater Quality
Managing Water Resources
Financial & Private Sector Development
Private Sector
Private Sector Activities
Private Sector Analysis
Private Sector Assessments
Private Sector Development
Private Sector Investments
Private Sector Management
Private Sector Participation
Private Sector Projects
Sewage management
Waste Disposal
Sanitation services wastes
Water pollutants
Water storage
Private enterprises
Private ownership
Privatization
Fresh water
Underground water
Water quality management
Drinking water protection
Source water protection
Water-supply
Water harvesting
Water in agriculture
Integrated water development
Residential water consumption
Corporatization
Capitalism
Free markets
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