Egypt, Türkiye discuss coop. in water, sanitation projects
Egyptian Deputy Minister of Housing, Utilities and
Urban Communities Sayed Ismail met with officials from Alkataş, a leading
Turkish company specializing in infrastructure projects, sustainable infrastructure
solutions, renewable energy and the transition to a low-carbon economy
worldwide, to explore avenues of cooperation and exchange of expertise in
utilities projects, particularly wastewater treatment plants, sludge
management, biogas energy plants and sustainable infrastructure projects.
The meeting was attended by Chairman of the National
Authority for Drinking Water and Sanitation Amin Shawky, Deputy Head of the
Project Management Unit (PMU) at the Ministry of Housing Mohamed Moawad and
other officials in the water sector.
Ismail highlighted the tremendous progress in
implementing drinking water and sanitation projects in recent years.
He asserted the ministry’s efforts, in line with
Egypt’s national vision, to collaborate with international companies with
advanced expertise, attract serious investments, transfer modern technologies
in wastewater treatment, sludge management, renewable energy projects and
modern utilities management, all contributing to the country’s sustainable
development plans and improving service quality for citizens.
He underscored the ministry’s efforts to encourage
private sector participation in investing, operating, and maintaining drinking
water and sanitation projects to safeguard investments and ensure high-quality
service delivery.
He affirmed that the ministry is fully prepared to
provide all forms of support to private sector companies specialized in
executing and managing wastewater and sludge projects, while overcoming any
challenges they may face.
Meanwhile, executive director of Alkataş outlined the
company’s establishment history and extensive international experience,
highlighting its implementation and operation of wastewater treatment plants
with a total capacity exceeding 3.1 million cubic meters per day and 2.6
million cubic meters per day in operation and maintenance services.
Source: The Egyptian Gazette