PPIAF Gridlines - Partnering for Water in the Cote d'Ivoire(lessons from 50 years of successful operation)

This African success story shows that a pragmatic partnership between a committed government and an efficient private operator can produce  tangible and sustained benefits for the population.

For more information about this sector, please visit Public–Private Partnerships in Water and Sanitation.

Laws and Regulations Relating to Municipal PPPs -Cote D’Ivoire

Decret No. 2012-1151 - Ivory Coast has passed a cross-cutting decree in 2012 to regulate PPPs - and retained a large definition of the latter. It includes various types of PPPs - from the concession, lease and management (under the civil law notion of "délégation de service public") to BOT and its variances to PFI-type of contracts (whereby the private party is paid by the public party for the investment but does not bear the commercial risk) - to joint ventures between a public and a private party.

Partnering for water in Côte d’Ivoire

The public-private partnership (PPP) for the national water utility of Côte d’Ivoire is the oldest and largest water PPP in the developing world. In place since 1960 and today serving more than 7 million people, this PPP has provided quality service for decades and made remarkable progress in expanding access in the 1990s. It even proved resilient to civil strife and the de facto partition of the country in 2002.

Côte d’Ivoire: Henri Konan Bedié Toll Bridge

Abidjan’s bridges and infrastructure have been under severe strain following Côte d’Ivoire’s decade-long civil conflict, and the city’s acute traffic problems threatened to hinder recovery. The new Henri Konan Bedié toll bridge, which consists of two three-lane carriageways and cuts the journey time between two major districts of Abidjan from one hour to 15 minutes, was designed to put Abidjan back on the path to prosperity and ease citizens’ lives.

Summary of Benchmarking PPP Procurement 2018 in Côte d'Ivoire

Procuring Infrastructure Public-Private Partnerships 2018 is designed to help governments improve their PPP regulatory quality. By benchmarking the regulatory frameworks of economies around the world against internationally recognized good practices in procuring PPPs, this assessment identifies areas for improvement in the preparation, procurement, and management of PPPs.