In Brazil 90 Million Have No Sewage Collection

The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) and Brazil’s Ministry of Cities signed a loan contract worth US$ 95.479 million to commence the Social Action Program in Sanitation (PASS-IDB).

The funds should be disbursed over a period of four years and six months. The loan can be repaid in up to 25 years.

The purpose of the program is to improve and expand water supply and sewage services for low-income residents of cities with populations of 15-75 thousand and where the Human Development Index (HDI) is below the national average.


“The program will cover about 120 Brazilian municipalities,” informed the National Secretary of Environmental Sanitation, Abelardo de Oliveira Filho.

Since 2003 the federal government has earmarked US$ 1.48 billion (4.3 billion reais) for municipal and state governments and public utility companies to use on projects to construct and expand systems for water supply, sewage treatment, adequate garbage disposal, and drainage. The amount represents nearly double what was spent during the period 1995-2002, Oliveira Filho informed.

More than 90 million Brazilians do not have sewage collection and treatment. Over 45 million do not have potable water. And 15 million do not have garbage collection.

That was the portrait presented just last maonth by Oliveira Filho, speaking at the eighth regional seminar to discuss a draft bill on environmental sanitation. The seminar took place at the Legislative Assembly of São Paulo.

“We want to send a bill to Congress that will guarantee all Brazilians, in the shortest time possible, access to potable water and a life of quality in a healthy enviroment,” said Oliveira Filho.

The secretary went on to say that it is the obligation of the government to define guidelines and policies after listening to the voice of all the people””the business sector, the labor sector, social movements, consumers, the academic community, regulatory agencies and others.

Agência Brasil

Tags:

You May Also Like

Some of the Brightest Brazilian Minds Debate Brazil’s Risks and Promises

LatinFinance’s respected Brazil Investment Forum will debate and examine the question: ‘Is Brazil really ...

The Zen of Brazil

It’s a cliché to say it takes longer to get things done in Brazil. ...

With an Eye on Reelection Brazil President Is Back on Twitter After Three-Year Silence

The president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, is breaking close to three years of silence ...

Analysts Upgrade Forecast for Brazil’s Surplus to US$ 38 Billion

The good performance in Brazilian exports in the beginning of the year has caused ...

Brazil: Rio Group Defends Social Justice and Multilateralism

The Ministers of Foreign Relations of the Rio Group have already drafted a series ...

New Documents Show Role of Brazil’s President Elect as a Guerrilla Fighter

Dilma Rousseff, Brazil’s president-elect, gathered information and advised guerrilla groups bank hold-ups in the ...

Arab Summit: Now in Brazil, Next in Morocco

The Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, announced that the next meeting of ...

Brazil’s Corruption Scandal Keeping Country from Having Better Credit Profile

Latin American markets mostly declined on the day, as investors continued their trend from ...

Brazil Launches Aggressive Campaign Against Child Sex Abuse

Brazilian government efforts to combat sexual exploitation of children and adolescents are gaining reinforcement ...

Brazil and Barbados Agree Haiti’s Violence Must End

The Minister of Foreign Relations of Barbados, Billie Miller, praised Brazil’s performance in Haiti, ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`