At project appraisal in 2009, there was no piped water supply in the Khorezm province and in eight project towns of the Republic of Karakalpakstan an autonomous republic within Uzbekistan, and the residents relied largely on yard swigs, wells, or purchased drinking water.
In 2006, only about 46% of Viet Nam’s rural population had access to clean water, and water was not available throughout the year. About 83% had latrines, but only 48% of these were hygienic, by government standards. Knowledge of individual sanitation remained poor.
On 28 August 2009, the Asian Development (ADB) and the Uzbek government signed a financing framework agreement for a multitranche financing facility (MFF) of up to $300 million to support Uzbekistan’s Water Supply and Sanitation Services Investment Program. On 21 April 2010, ADB approved the second tranche of the MFF, totaling $140 million to finance project 2, which was designed to improve th
Since embarking on a modernization process in 1961, Bhutan has faced increasing urban migration due to limited opportunities in the rural areas. If trends continue, close to half of the country’s population may reside in the urban centers by 2020, increasing the pressure on already strained urban infrastructure and services.
Indonesia’s poor people declined from 32.53 million in March 2009 to 31.02 million in March 2010. Nevertheless, rural poverty remained high, partly because of continuing limited access to basic services and poor transport. In the urban areas where about half of the country’s 250 million people lived, only about 1% of had access to sewerage.
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