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Water Governance in Jordan

Overcoming the Challenges to Private Sector Participation

image of Water Governance in Jordan

This report assesses the main governance and financing challenges to private sector participation (PSP) in the water supply and sanitation sector of Jordan, and provides ways forward to address them, based on international experience and OECD compendium of principles and good practices. Using the diagnostic analysis of the governance challenges to PSP in the Jordan water sector (Chapter 1), the report identifies ways forward to overcome bottlenecks focusing on three key pillars (Chapter 2): i) managing public-private partnership in a fiscally constrained environment through appropriate budget processes; ii) reducing the regulatory risks through supporting the development of a high-quality framework; and iii)managing and enhancing stakeholder engagement to improve accountability and buy-in. The report also includes an action plan with concrete measures to implement the recommendations proposed in the report.

The report has been developed as part of a water policy dialogue conducted by the OECD jointly with the Global Water Partnership-Mediterranean (GWP-Med) in the context of the project labelled by the Union for the Mediterranean (UfM) “Governance and Financing for the Mediterranean Water Sector”, with the support of the FEMIP Trust Fund of the European Investment Bank.

English Also available in: French

Ways forward

Improving financial sustainability, the regulatory framework and stakeholders' engagement

Based on the diagnostic analysis, this chapter suggests ways forward to overcome the main governance challenges faced by Jordan in delivering on its ambitious pipeline of projects with the private sector in the water sector. This chapter focuses on three main areas of recommendations: i) managing PPPs in a fiscally constrained environment through appropriate budget processes; ii) reducing the regulatory risk through supporting the development of a high-quality water regulatory framework; and iii) enhancing stakeholder engagement to improve accountability and buy-in. The Jordanian authorities are active in these three areas and a number of reform initiatives are already underway. This chapter seeks to support the existing efforts by providing a set of practical recommendations, building on the compendium of principles and good practices developed by the OECD and international experience.

English Also available in: French

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