Public Private Partnerships – Promoting Gender Equity, The Gender and Growth Assessment for Uganda
Gender Entrepreneurship Markets (GEM) initiative of the International Finance Corporation (IFC)
Gender Entrepreneurship Markets (GEM) initiative of the International Finance Corporation (IFC)
Water and Sanitation Sub-Sector Gender Strategy (2010 – 2015), Government of Uganda, Ministry of Water and Environment, 2009.
Related Information:
Tracking Reference:
Uganda_The_Public_Private_Partnership_Act_2015
These guidelines are meant to provide clarity and guidance to persons engaged or intending to be engaged in electrical installation work.
Image by Pixabay
Performance Contract for Water Supply and Sewerage Authorities
Title |
Management Contract for Town Water Supply
|
Parties |
Town Water Supply and Sewerage Authority (the “Authority”) and a private operator
|
Date |
N/A
|
Duration |
This document introduces the PPP legal and institutional framework of Uganda.
Despite water being subsidized in most developing countries, poorer households end up paying more per unit of consumption because they are generally not connected to the network and, as a result, are forced to buy water from public fountains or street vendors at a higher price. This note includes data on Niamey households’ water consumption and expenditure from different sources to estimate unit costs of service provision for water, looking at differences in costs according to both service provider and household poverty status.
The document is an analysis on the role of private sector operators in the delivery of water in small towns, especially after an output-based aid was piloted in certain towns. The paper elaborates on the methodology and challenges that delivering water faces, such as regulatory issues of the region and the policy implications of the project.
This document studies the impact of pro-poor policies on water coverage in Uganda in the water sector. The policies discussed are implemented by the National Water and Sewerage Corporation, particularly in informal settlements in Kampala City.
Related Information: