A
picture taken on December 16, 2013 in Inga shows the dam 1 at Inga electricity
production site near the Congo river ©Marc Jourdier (AFP)
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The World Bank has frozen
funding for a massive dam project in the Democratic Republic of Congo after the
government altered plans for the project.
AFP
report continues:
The
Bank said in a statement late Monday that is was suspending disbursements on
its US$73.1 million grant aimed at funding technical assistance on the Inga-3
Basse Chute hydropower dam.
It
froze the money after a DR Congo "decision to take the project in a
different strategic direction to that agreed between the World Bank and the
government in 2014."
It
gave no details on what the problem was, but noted that its funding "aimed
to support a government-led process for the transparent development of Inga-3
BC as a public-private partnership."
Only
six percent of the funds have been disbursed so far, the Bank said.
The
Inga 3 Basse Chute project is designed to boost power supplies to a region
starved of electricity.
It
would divert Congo River waters into a 12-kilometer (7.5-mile) channel and then
pass them through a 100-meter-high (330-foot) hydropower dam in the Bundi
Valley before releasing the water back into the river.
The
intake would be above the existing Inga 1 and Inga 2 dams, and the outflow
downstream from both.
The
dam is expected to generate 4,800 megawatts of power, equivalent to the output
of three third-generation nuclear reactors.
The
World Bank said it remains committed to supporting the DR Congo.
"The World Bank Group is in a continuing dialogue with the Government about the implementation arrangements of the project, with the goal of ensuring that it follows international good practice," it said.
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