World Bank HQ

Food Systems Resilience Program for Eastern and Southern Africa: Construction of 3 Micro Housed Irrigation Project at Shalo, Obora & Kabira Kebeles and Construction of Derba Rehabilitation & Expansion at Welta'i Barisa Kebeles in Sinana Woreda, Bale Zone

Last update: Dec 18, 2024 Last update: Dec 18, 2024

Details

Location:Ethiopia
Ethiopia
Category:Works
Status:Closed
Sectors:Civil Engineering
Languages:English
Funding Agency:
Contracting authority type:Regional / local authority
Eligibility:Organisation
Budget:N/A
Date posted: Dec 18, 2024

Attachments 0

Associated Awards

Project cycle timeline

STAGES
EARLY INTELLIGENCE
PROCUREMENT
IMPLEMENTATION
Cancelled
Status
Programming
Formulation
Approval
Forecast
Open
Closed
Shortlisted
Awarded
Evaluation

Associated tenders 1

Status

Date

Description

NOTICE AT-A-GLANCE Project ID: P178566 Project Title: Food Systems Resilience Program for Eastern and Southern Africa Country: Eastern and Southern Africa Notice No: OP00329128 Notice Type: Invitation for Bids Notice Status: Published Borrower Bid Referen
Want to unlock full information?
Member-only information. Become a member to access this information. Procurement notices from over 850+ sources of tenders and grants published by donors, development banks, foundations, and international financial institutions (IFIs) are available here.
tender Background

About the Funding Agency

The World Bank (USA) is part of an international financial agency that makes loans and grants to governments in low- and middle-income countries to fund capital projects. The United States was a driving force behind the founding of the World Bank in 1944 and it is still the World Bank's largest shareholder today.

The United States contributes to tackling critical international development concerns through the World Bank Group and has a long history of generously supporting the objectives of the World Bank Group and has been a champion of the International Development Association (IDA) which provides low-interest loans and grants to the world's poorest countries. The key U.S. priorities at the World Bank include a multilateral health and economic response to COVID-19, debt sustainability and transparency, promoting governance and fighting corruption, ending energy poverty and supporting a strong emphasis on accountability, transparency and development impact.