The World Bank has approved US$35 million in financing for the Sarajevo
Waste Water Project in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The Project will help
rehabilitate waste water infrastructure in the Canton of Sarajevo, and
repair and replace primary and secondary waste water transmission pipes
and other network rehabilitation. The project will also support
capacity building and institutional strengthening of the Sarajevo Water
and Waste Water Company (VIK).
"The
Sarajevo Waste Water Project will improve the living conditions of the
population in the areas covered by VIK Sarajevo and in downstream
riverside communities," said
Marco Mantovanelli, World Bank Country
Manager for Bosnia and Herzegovina (pictured right). "It will reduce
the population's exposure to and reliance on highly polluted water from
the Miljacka and Bosna Rivers and will also improve the efficiency of
the waste water collection network in the Sarajevo Canton."
Service
delivery problems in Bosnia and Herzegovina are compounded by the still
lingering after-effects of the Bosnia and Herzegovina conflict, which
left vast portions of basic infrastructure destroyed or severely
damaged. A case that vividly illustrates the problem is the waste water
collection and treatment in the City of Sarajevo. The Waste Water
Treatment Plant was built in the early 1980's on the occasion of the
1984 Winter Olympics. Construction of the plant was supported by the
World Bank financed Sarajevo Water Supply and Sewerage Project.
However,
the plant was extensively damaged in spring 1992 at the outset of the
conflict, during which the sewer network was also destroyed in various
places.
The World Bank portfolio of active projects in Bosnia
and Herzegovina now includes 15 operations worth about US$ 317.4
million. More information about the World Bank in Bosnia and
Herzegovina available at:
www.worldbank.ba