The 2013 edition of the ground breaking High Level Forum on water and sanitation in Africa
A platform for expanded business
opportunities for investors
Ouagadougou - 16th October 2013, November 21
to 23 High Level Forum on water and sanitation for all in Africa presents an
unprecedented opportunity for potential investors in water, sanitation and
affordable housing businesses in Africa. The forum assembles Heads of States,
Finance Ministers, Water and Sanitation Ministers, investors and donors from
southern countries and also from the north, private businesses and trade
associations from Africa, and development practitioners with a focus on
identifying business opportunities in the water and sanitation sector.
Africa is among
the fastest growing regions of the world with an average growth of 5.6% per
year. Africa is also fast gaining increasing access to international capital,
meaning that the potential for investment and expansion in infrastructure is
higher.
Africa’s growth
is largely constrained by poor infrastructure. A study conducted by the African
Development Bank estimated that the total cost of bridging Africa’s
infrastructure gap over the next decade will be about $93 million a year.
In 1980,
Africa’s urban population was estimated at 28%. By 2008 it had risen to 40% and
projected to reach 50% by 2030.
This rapid
urbanization rate has created demand for more infrastructure including housing,
water and sanitation systems. To spur the growth, many African governments have
strengthened their legal frameworks, policy and strategy regimes,
anti-corruption policies, and the quality of their human capital.
In 2000, it was
estimated that 59 million households had $5000 or more income above which they
start spending roughly 50% on non-food items. By 2014, this figure is expected
to increase to 106 million households. Thus many more Africans are prepared to
exchange cash for quality service especially in water, sanitation and housing.
Despite these
positive trends, the water and sanitation sector has not yet received adequate
investor attention in Africa. This state of affair is mostly but arguably
attributed to the socialist focused development paradigm for the sector; water
and sanitation services were branded as social services with strict
governmental controls. This limited the business interest in the sector and led
to over-reliance on government investment and charity.
Today about 400
million people living in Africa lack access to clean drinking water, while over
600 million people lack basic sanitation services. Several millions of children
die from preventable water and sanitation-related illnesses every year. In
Nigeria and Ethiopia for instance, about 97,000 and 33,000 children die every
year of diarrheal diseases caused by poor drinking water and sanitation respectively.
All the countries with larger economies in Africa including South Africa,
Ghana, Sudan, Angola still lose thousands of children every year through water
and sanitation-related illnesses.
This realization
has triggered the call for a shift in the development orientation for Africa’s
water and sanitation sector from social to the inclusion of more economic and
financial models.
With focus on
south-south cooperation for water and sanitation sector growth in Africa, the
2013 High Level Forum provides the platform for exploring business
opportunities with potential partners from India, China, Turkey, Israel,
Malaysia, Singapore, Brazil, Taiwan, Japan, not forgetting the continent’s
traditional partners from the north. African investors can also explore
opportunities outside the continent.
The event,
organized by Water and Sanitation for Africa (WSA) in collaboration with the
government of Côte d’Ivoire in Abidjan, with sessions like the High Level Panel
of Heads of States in Africa and Finance Ministers Roundtable, for instance
provides opportunities for direct access to an estimated 25 governments for
closer business discussions. There are also opportunities for one-on-one
meetings through the Business-to-business and business-to-government sessions.
Visit for more information.
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More information on investment opportunities
Lincoln
Opio: lincolnopio@wsafrica.org
Tel: +226
74 48 56 59
More information on the High Level Forum
Tel : +226 74 48 60 99
2. The Event Manager hlf2013@wsafrica.org
Tel: + 225 20 00 60 30 / +225 20 00
60 31
Media Contacts
1. Yacine Traore: yacinetraore@wsafrica.org
Tel: +226 74 48 54 49
2. Emmanuel Addai: emmanueladdai@wsafrica.org
Tel: +226 78 89 83 91
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