This blog post is part of a special series titled “Spatial Insights into the Gender Employment Gap”, powered by the World Bank’s Geospatial Operations Support Team. Read the series’ first and second installments.

This blog post is part of a special series titled “Spatial Insights into the Gender Employment Gap”, powered by the World Bank’s Geospatial Operations Support Team. Read the series’ first and second installments.

What would a day without water look like?
No drink to quench your thirst, no water to cook or clean, and no shower to freshen up. The list of inconveniences is long and, for a lot of us, unimaginable.
Water is fundamental to life. Yet, millions around the world still lack access to safely managed drinking water and sanitation. For many—especially girls and women in rural areas—this often means walking long distances to fetch water, missing out on education, or skipping school altogether due to lack of proper sanitation facilities. Addressing this crisis has never been more urgent, especially as climate change continues to deepen its impact. Among the top six risks of multidimensional poverty identified by the World Bank, lack of sanitation and safe drinking water remain alarmingly prominent, particularly in low-income countries receiving support from the International Development Association (IDA).
Continue readingOperational procurement is a crucial part of the World Bank’s efforts to become a Better Bank and fulfill our mission. Effective procurement enables our clients to achieve value for money, transparency, efficiency, and fairness in Bank-financed operations. By setting quality standards in international procurement, we respond to our clients’ needs by driving market innovation, attracting top suppliers, expanding options, and fostering global competition to deliver development outcomes with speed.
Starting March 1, 2025, the World Bank will introduce a range of measures aimed at delivering better outcomes in procurement under Investment Project Financing. These new requirements reflect extensive feedback from our clients and the business community and demonstrate our commitment to modern procurement practices. First, we will require a 50 percent minimum quality weighting for most internationally competitive procurement. Second, for contracts with an estimated value over $10 million, early market engagement will be an integrated part of our processes to attract high-caliber bidders and optimize procurement strategies. Third, we will collaborate with clients to aggregate smaller contracts into larger packages and offer direct payment options to reduce supplier payment risks.
Training programs on these new approaches will be provided to clients and World Bank staff. We will also increase our support, oversight, and scrutiny of project procurement strategies, market engagement approaches, rated criteria, quality weightings, and related procurement actions.
To align with this new mandate and to support implementation, we have published:
We look forward to working together and remain committed to modern, fair, and transparent procurement processes that lead to better development outcomes for people in our client countries.
South Asia’s female labor force participation today remains among the lowest in the world: More than 400 million working-age women in the region are outside of the labor force, which constitutes a significant output loss. South Asia’s working women face supply-side and demand-side obstacles, as well as unfavorable social norms.
Continue readingTwo years ago, Türkiye was shaken by a series of devastating earthquakes, which claimed over 50,000 lives and caused direct damages exceeding $34 billion and associated reconstruction costs estimated at $ 81.5 billion. Entire neighborhoods were reduced to rubble, with thousands of homes, schools, hospitals, and transportation networks destroyed. More than 1.5 million people were displaced, and millions face an uncertain future in the wake of the immense loss and disruption.
Continue readingSeating in her bedroom in Ndorong Serere, a village located 100 kms from Senegal’s Capital Dakar, Khady studies her natural science textbook under the steady glow of an electric lamp. Her dream of becoming a doctor fuels her focus, the conditions around her now match her aspirations. Just weeks ago, the scene was starkly different – she had to ration her flashlight batteries carefully, limiting her study time each evening and often struggling to complete her homework before the batteries died completely.
“I can now study my lessons in better conditions at night”. Khady attributes her recent academic progress not only to her teachers and her commitment but also to the arrival of reliable lighting. “Last year at this same time, I had a grade of 10 in natural sciences. This year, I have a grade of 17,” she says with a proud smile.
I learned and practiced carpentry at 10 kilometers from Ndorong Serere, but when electricity came to this locality, I didn’t hesitate to return and open my first carpentry workshop.
Djaraf,
Carpenter
Khady’s story reflects Senegal’s broader journey toward universal electricity access. The country has made significant strides, with a national access rate of 84% according to government sources. This progress has transformed millions of lives, yet the journey is far from over. While urban areas enjoy near-universal access, over 30 % of rural communities remain disconnected from the grid.
For Ndorong Serere, the arrival of electricity has been a catalyst for transformation. Djaraf, a skilled carpenter, is one of the many who seized new opportunities. “I learned and practiced carpentry at 10 kilometers from Ndorong Serere, but when electricity came to this locality, I didn’t hesitate to return and open my first carpentry workshop,” he explains.
Beyond economic opportunities, electricity has restored dignity and improved quality of life. Village elder Cheikh Diouf recalls past struggles: “When someone passed away, residents had to travel 10 kilometers to get ice to preserve the body while waiting for the deceased’s family to come.” Now such basic challenges are a thing of the past, as energy access has fundamentally reshaped the community’s daily reality.
Senegal’s commitment to universal electricity access is supported by innovative financing and strategic partnerships, including the Senegal Energy Access Scale Up Project with a $150 million financing from the International Development Association (IDA). The project aims to build and rehabilitate nearly 4,000 kilometers of power lines. It will bring electricity to 200,000 households, electrify 600 health clinics and 200 schools, and ensure that 100% of distribution infrastructure is resilient to climate related events. A least-cost geospatial electrification plan is also in development to optimize efforts. Senegal’s energy strategy prioritizes mobilizing $2 billion in private investments. Recognizing that achieving universal access cannot rely solely on public resources, the approach leverages private sector innovation and efficiency to meet ambitious targets.
The Government’s vision for the sector goes beyond access to embrace sustainability. Exploiting its gas reserves, Senegal has embarked on an ambitious plan to convert its heavy fuel production to gas and increase its renewable energy share to 40% of its generation mix by 2030, while expanding total generation capacity by 70%. This effort is part the Just Energy Transition Partnership (JETP), a global financing initiative through which Senegal partners with France, Germany, the European Union, the United Kingdom, and Canada to achieve universal energy access and develop a sustainable, low-carbon energy system by promoting renewable energy technologies. Additionally, the country is accelerating access to clean cooking solutions, aiming for an annual growth rate of 11.3%, up from the current 3.25%.
This push for clean energy access would benefit more people, with particular focus on women and communities disproportionately burdened by traditional cooking methods. The initiative aligns with the broader “Mission 300” movement, which aims to connect 300 million Africans to electricity by 2030.
In Ndorong Serere, these national ambitions are already creating tangible change. It is a scene that Senegal hopes to replicate across every village and town, illuminating the path toward a more equitable and sustainable future.

Are you interested in contributing to Ukraine’s reconstruction and looking for financial opportunities? Then join our information session on international financing options for reconstruction on 13 February 2025. We will inform you about the opportunities that international financial institutions (IFIs) can offer you.
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Continue readingWhat will it take to bring electricity to 300 million people in Africa who currently live without it? This is the goal we’ve set for Mission 300—to halve the number of people on the continent without reliable electricity by 2030. But setting a goal is just the spark. We need a full-blown power surge of bold reforms, investments, and an enabling environment for sustainable, scalable, and affordable energy solutions.
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