Sustainable and Innovative Rural Water, Sanitation and Hygiene - SIRWASH (IADB-RG-O1691)

Countries
  • Bolivia
  • Brazil
  • Haiti
  • Peru
Geographic location where the impacts of the investment may be experienced.
Financial Institutions
  • Inter-American Development Bank (IADB)
International, regional and national development finance institutions. Many of these banks have a public interest mission, such as poverty reduction.
Project Status
Approved
Stage of the project cycle. Stages vary by development bank and can include: pending, approval, implementation, and closed or completed.
Bank Risk Rating
C
Environmental and social categorization assessed by the development bank as a measure of the planned project’s environmental and social impacts. A higher risk rating may require more due diligence to limit or avoid harm to people and the environment. For example, "A" or "B" are risk categories where "A" represents the highest amount of risk. Results will include projects that specifically recorded a rating, all other projects are marked ‘U’ for "Undisclosed."
Borrower
Regional
A public entity (government or state-owned) provided with funds or financial support to manage and/or implement a project.
Sectors
  • Water and Sanitation
The service or industry focus of the investment. A project can have several sectors.
Investment Amount (USD)
$ 3.87 million
Value listed on project documents at time of disclosure. If necessary, this amount is converted to USD ($) on the date of disclosure. Please review updated project documents for more information.
Primary Source

Original disclosure @ IADB website

Updated in EWS Nov 9, 2020


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Project Description
If provided by the financial institution, the Early Warning System Team writes a short summary describing the purported development objective of the project and project components. Review the complete project documentation for a detailed description.

The overall objective of SIRWAS (Sustainable and Innovative Rural Water and Sanitation services) is to contribute to closing the gaps in coverage and quality of rural Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) services, which are socially acceptable, affordable and sustainable, thus contributing to fostering the necessary capacities and creating and enabling environment to make changes over time. The intervention will use a three-pronged approach of: 1) policy influencing, 2) innovation and 3) knowledge management with a strong focus on leveraging partnerships. The geographical intervention of SIRWAS is foreseen based on the presence of rural populations without or suffering from poor access to WASH services and the political will of the governments to close the gaps, in the perspective of "Leave no one behind". Activities will be executed at regional level, with emphasis in four Latin American countries (Peru, Bolivia, Brazil and Haiti).

Investment Description
Here you can find a list of individual development financial institutions that finance the project.

The "Investment Type" was not available at the moment of the snapshot.


Contact Information
This section aims to support the local communities and local CSO to get to know which stakeholders are involved in a project with their roles and responsibilities. If available, there may be a complaint office for the respective bank which operates independently to receive and determine violations in policy and practice. Independent Accountability Mechanisms receive and respond to complaints. Most Independent Accountability Mechanisms offer two functions for addressing complaints: dispute resolution and compliance review.

ACCOUNTABILITY MECHANISM OF IADB

The Independent Consultation and Investigation Mechanism (MICI) is the independent complaint mechanism and fact-finding body for people who have been or are likely to be adversely affected by an Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) or Inter-American Investment Corporation (IIC)-funded project. If you submit a complaint to MICI, they may assist you in addressing the problems you raised through a dispute-resolution process with those implementing the project and/or through an investigation to assess whether the IDB or IIC is following its own policies for preventing or mitigating harm to people or the environment. You can submit a complaint by sending an email to MICI@iadb.org. You can learn more about the MICI and how to file a complaint at http://www.iadb.org/en/mici/mici,1752.html (in English) or http://www.iadb.org/es/mici/mici,1752.html (Spanish).

How it works

How it works