USAID, Gates Foundation to lend a hand to Swachh Bharat Mission

Our Bureau Updated - January 24, 2018 at 02:17 PM.

US agency signs MoU with Centre to provide technical support

New beginning: Union Minister M Venkaiah Naidu (centre) at the signingof an MoU between the Ministry of Urban Development and the Bill &Melinda Gates Foundation in New Delhi on Tuesday. - PTI

The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) on Tuesday signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Ministry of Urban Development to assist the government with knowledge exchange and sharing of best practices for water and sanitation services.

Under the MoU, performance indicators and city ranking systems will be introduced for incentivising participation in Swachh Bharat Mission and promoting competition between cities. “USAID will provide technical support to demonstrate a fully functional sanitation system with containment, collection, transport, treatment, reuse and safe disposal of faecal waste in Visakhapatnam,” a statement from the Ministry of Urban Development said.

Promoting public-private partnerships, USAID will help develop creative messaging for behaviour changes to increase demand for toilets and supply of sanitation products and services.

The agency is likely to spend about $2 million per year on these activities.

A separate Memorandum of Cooperation was signed with the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation under which the latter will provide technical and management support in the implementation of the mission, fund the National Level Program Management Unit for coordination of decentralised and non-sewered sanitation solutions, award grants to organisations selected by the ministry for delivering sanitation services and release grant funds to grantees such as NGOs, public or private organisations annually, based on satisfactory performance in respect of milestones specified.

“The Foundation will assist in capacity building for planning, project preparation, implementation and management through training and skill development focusing on towns with population of one to five lakh located along the Ganga at a cost of $2.50 million per year,” the statement added.

Published on January 13, 2015 16:04