United States Agency for International Development (USA - HQ)

Cross-Border Community Resilience Activity

Last update: Jul 9, 2021 Last update: Jul 9, 2021

Details

Location:Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South ...
Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan, Uganda
Category:Non-consulting services
Status:Forecast
Sectors:Security & Peacebuilding, Border Management, Disaster Reduction & Humanitarian Relief
Contracting authority type:Development Institution
Eligibility:Unknown
Budget:N/A
Date posted: May 13, 2021

Attachments 1

Associated Awards

Project cycle timeline

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

Description

Business Forecast Cross-Border Community Resilience Activity A&A Plan ID: AA-315078NAICS Code: 541990Fiscal Year of Action: 2021Last updated: 5/13/2021 Operating Unit: East AfricaSector: Agriculture and Food SecurityA&A Specialist / POC: Ketan Soo
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Location:
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Funding agency:
USAID
Status:
forecast
Location:
Afghanistan, Armenia, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Cambodia, Central African Republic, Colombia, Dem. Rep. Congo, Dominican Republic, Egypt, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Georgia, Ghana, Guatemala, Haiti, Honduras, India, Indonesia, Jamaica, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mexico, Moldova, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Palestine / West Bank & Gaza, Philippines, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Tanzania, Thailand, Timor-Leste, Uganda, Ukraine, Vietnam, Zambia, Zimbabwe
tender Background

About the Funding Agency

The United States Agency for International Development ( USAID) is the federal government agency that leads worldwide development and humanitarian efforts to save lives, lessen poverty, enhance democratic government, and support people to move beyond reliance on aid. The mission is to promote and demonstrate democratic values abroad and advance a free, peaceful, and prosperous world.

USAID has offices around the world, in all the countries where it leads projects and helps the vulnerable population in countries such as Namibia, Laos, Libya, Barbados, Maldives, Palestine/West Bank & Gaza, Germany, Cote d'Ivoire, USA, Paraguay, Ecuador, Nicaragua, USA, Panama, Guinea, Angola, Sierra Leone, Mongolia, USA, Madagascar, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Lebanon, Myanmar, Jamaica, Bolivia, Peru, Zimbabwe, Nepal, and the Philippines.

USAID has hundreds of ongoing projects and funds in the world, the main responsibilities being to promote global health, support global stability, provide humanitarian assistance, catalyze innovation and partnership and empower women and girls. USAID engaged with African nations at an early stage and has since acted in partnership to achieve common interests and ideals from security to global health to climate change to freedom and democracy to shared wealth.

USAID also plays a crucial role in collaborating with Asian nations to ensure that the development decisions they make today help them to achieve long-term success by advancing countries on their paths to consciousness. In Europe and Eurasia, USAID continues to confront massive corruption, political stagnation, severe poverty, and underdeveloped policy and regulatory systems.

About the Sectors

Security & Peacebuilding

Focuses on strengthening safety and security systems while supporting conflict prevention, stabilization, and long-term peacebuilding efforts.


Key areas:
  • Security sector support and oversight mechanisms
  • Protection systems, surveillance, and access control
  • Risk reduction programs
  • Conflict prevention, mediation, and peacebuilding initiatives

Border Management

Focuses on strengthening secure and efficient border control systems, promoting integrated approaches to regulate cross-border movements of people and goods, and combating transnational threats such as smuggling, trafficking, and terrorism in developing nations and border regions.


Key areas:
  • Enhancing border control and surveillance capabilities
  • Strengthening inter-agency and international cooperation
  • Developing infrastructure and capacities to counter cross-border crime

Locations

Ethiopia

Ethiopia’s infrastructure strategy has been transformative, centered on large-scale energy, transport and industrial development projects that support economic transformation. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam - Africa’s largest hydroelectric facility - exemplifies national efforts to expand energy access and build export capacity, while ambitious transport initiatives include expanding expressways and planning what is set to be Africa’s largest new airport. Free trade zones and enhanced logistics corridors aim to improve competitiveness and regional integration. Continued reforms to strengthen institutional capacity, attract investment, and extend services to rural areas are essential to sustaining inclusive growth.

Nr. of tenders: 23061
Nr. of grants: 4035
Nr. of donors: 843
Nr. of jobs: 91

Kenya

Kenya has positioned infrastructure investment as a pillar of its development strategy, deploying public funds and innovative financing to expand roads, ports, rail networks and energy systems that enable trade and productivity. Under a World Bank–supported PPP framework, Kenya has strengthened legal and institutional capacity to mobilise private capital for infrastructure across sectors including transport, water and housing, widening access to services and supporting economic transformation.

Nr. of tenders: 24545
Nr. of grants: 4310
Nr. of donors: 853
Nr. of jobs: 148
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