The government of Côte d’Ivoire has launched the implementation of a drinking water supply (AEP) project in Didiévi. Minister of Hydraulics Laurent Tchagba made the announcement and said that the project is entirely financed by the Ivorian state, to the tune of US $ 616,942, and it is expected to be delivered in seven months’ time.
The water project involves construction of a borehole with a provisional pumping rate of approximately 9 cubic meters per hour. A treatment plant that will store its production in a water tower with a capacity of 50 cubic meters at a height of 15 meters will also be set up
According to Tchagba, the AEP will have the capacity to supply approximately 198 cubic meters of water per day to the populations of Bodo and Groyaokro localities for the next 15 years. Meanwhile, the Fluence Corporation Limited, An American based company that specializes in providing decentralized and pre-engineered water, wastewater treatment, and reuse solutions for both municipal and industrial applications across the world, is set to resume the implementation of a drinking water project in Abidjan.
Read:Chad to develop a drinking water supply in Kana
Largest freshwater reserve in the West African country
This comes a few months after the company postponed the start of work for the project, scheduled for June 30th last year, to a later date due to the global health crisis caused by the coronavirus. The project will be implemented within a span of 24 months at a total cost of close to US$ 200m. This project will serve at least 1.5 million people in Abidjan until 2040.
Fluence Corporation will build a drinking water plant with a capacity of 150,000 m3 per day that will exploit the Aghien lagoon, the largest freshwater reserve in the West African country. The company will also lay pipes to transport drinking water to two castles with a capacity of 5,000 m3 each.
[…] READ: Côte d’Ivoire launches drinking water project in Didiévi […]