of a woman collecting water in Haiti Almost all investments are financed by grants from
NGOs or
official development assistance, chiefly the
IDB, the
World Bank,
USAID and the European Union. As of 2013, for the first time a venture capital firm announced it would finance investments in the Haitian water sector.
Non-governmental organizations Non-governmental organizations (NGOs): Many NGOs finance their activities through both individual contributions and grants that come directly from government donors or indirectly through the Haitian government. Some of the NGOs active in drinking water supply in Haiti are: •
Action Contre la Faim (French), •
AMURT Haïti in
Anse Rouge commune,
Artibonite Department • the
Association haïtienne pour la maîtrise des eaux et des sols (ASSODLO) (Haitian). •
CARE (US), • The Comité Protos Haïti (Haitian), • The
Centre for Affordable Water and Sanitation Technology (CAWST) (Canadian), • Le
Groupe de recherche et d'échanges technologiques (GRET) (French), •
Helvetas (Swiss), • Inter Aide (French), • International Action (US), • Haiti Outreach (US), •
Oxfam (UK and Canada), •
Pan American Development Foundation (linked to the
Organisation of American States) •
World Vision (US). •
Sustainable Organic Integrated Livelihoods (SOIL) (US) •
Living Waters for the World (US) • Water Project For Haiti (Canada), Most NGOs are not specialized in water supply, but rather undertake community development across various sectors in specific localities. However, some NGOs - like International Action, Helvetas, ACF and GRET - focus on water supply and some also focus on sanitation.
Official Development Assistance Inter-American Development Bank The
Inter-American Development Bank is the largest donor for water supply and sanitation in Haiti with on-going projects in Port-au-Prince (since 2010), secondary cities (since 1998) and in rural areas (since 2006) implemented by DINEPA. The Spanish government provides substantial grant funding for IDB water and sanitation projects in Haiti.
World Bank The World Bank supports two rural water supply and sanitation project implemented by DINEPA with total funding of US$10m and a series of community-driven development (CDD) projects that allow communities to choose the type of investment they want to undertake, including small-scale drinking water supply activities. The CDD project is implemented by community-based organizations with the close support of NGOs that work on behalf of the Haitian government.
Venture capital In May 2013 the
venture capital firm
Leopard Capital, through its Leopard Haiti
private equity fund, announced that it intends to sell water for profit in Haiti at yet undisclosed locations and at an undisclosed price through a newly founded private company called
dloHaiti. It has raised US$3.4 million with the aim to build 40 water kiosks that would use solar-powered high-tech water purification systems. The company's investors also include the
International Finance Corporation's InfraVentures Fund, the
Netherlands Development Finance Company (FMO),
Miyamoto International, and Jim Chu, dloHaiti's CEO and Founder. == See also ==