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SA plans R27bn water infrastructure fund with climate finance

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South Africa is the fifth-most water scarce in sub-Saharan Africa.
South Africa is the fifth-most water scarce in sub-Saharan Africa.
Moyo Studio/Gallo Images
  • The Development Bank of Southern Africa plans to create an almost R27 billion water infrastructure fund.
  • It is seeking finance from the Green Climate Fund.
  • This week, the development finance institution said it would also support a new R18 billion green hydrogen fund.
  • For climate change news and analysis, go to News24 Climate Future.


A South African state development bank plans to create an almost $1.5 billion (~R27 billion) water infrastructure fund and is seeking finance from the Green Climate Fund. 

The Development Bank of Southern Africa has applied to the South Korea-based GCF for $235 million, according to documentation on the fund's website. A decision will be made by 13 July at a board meeting of the firm that manages more than $12 billion in assets.  

The fund is part of a raft of measures being taken by the government as its tries to kick-start its moribund economy by investing in infrastructure projects ranging from power plants and ports to water-supply programmes. This week, the DBSA said it will participate in the creation of a $1 billion (~R18 billion) green hydrogen investment fund.

READ | New R18bn fund, founded with Dutch support, to boost SA's green hydrogen projects 

Years of neglect have left the country suffering power outages on a daily basis, while the quality of water provision has slumped. At the same time the country is trying to make itself more resilient to climate change with much of its territory expected to become hotter and drier over coming decades. Already the country is the fifth-most water scarce in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the World Bank.

"The South African water sector needs progressive and innovative approaches to enable adaptation to climate change impacts and ensure a resilient and water secure future," the DBSA said in the documentation. 

Waste-water desalination

The GCF declined to comment. Boitumelo Mosako, the DBSA's chief executive officer, said in a 20 June interview that the GCF could provide money for project preparation and lending without being more specific.

The fund, known as the Water Reuse Programme, will initially focus on projects including curbing water losses, treating waste water so that it can be resold for industrial and agricultural use and water desalination plants.

The DBSA applied for $35 million of grants from the GCF to fund project preparation and capacity building and $200 million in the form of a loan that will likely be repaid over more than 10 years. That loan will allow the fund to lend $130 million to public borrowers such as municipalities and $70 million to private companies at concessional rates. 

South Africa's National Treasury and other investors that weren't identified will match the GCF's grant and provide a further $2 million to run a Water Partnership Office, which will facilitate private investment in water projects. The Treasury said it will respond to queries later.

The GCF funding is expected to catalyse private sector investment in the fund, which will act as a blended finance facility, and it is expected to have a budget of $1.47 billion, the DBSA said. Blended finance is the use of public and private sector capital together to fund projects.

That amount of money could finance an initial 10 projects that would boost daily water supply by 440 million liters and make 3.4 million people more resilient to climate change, the DBSA said. South Africa’s daily per-capita water consumption is about 216 liters, according to the Department of Water and Sanitation.

A national water plan released in 2019 said R900 billion needs to be spent on water-supply and storage infrastructure by 2030.



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