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National Water and Sewerage Corporation
Ugandan water company
Ugandan water company
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | National Water and Sewerage Corporation |
| type | Public utility |
| parent | Government of Uganda |
| services | Water Supply and Sanitation |
| industry | Water |
| key_people | **Badru Kiggundu** |
| Chairman | |
| **Silver Mugisha** | |
| Managing Director and CEO | |
| foundation | |
| assets | USh 4.5 trillion (US$1.23 billion) (2025) |
| num_employees | 2,860 (2016) |
| location | 3 Nakasero Road, Kampala, Uganda |
| homepage |
Chairman Silver Mugisha Managing Director and CEO
The National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC) is a water supply and sanitation company in Uganda. It is wholly owned by the government of Uganda.
As of October 2023, the company supplied 730000000 m³ of potable water daily to the country. This compares to 276000000 m³ daily output, supplied ten years earlier in 2013. This represents an 85 percent increase over those ten years. As of 2024 the corporation's non-revenue water was 34 percent, with plans to reduce it to 30 percent by 2029. The total population benefitting from NWSC water supply in 2024 was estimated at 18 million, with a target to increase that to 25 million by 2029.
Location
The company, as of July 2018, was in the final stages of construction of its new headquarters building at 3 Nakasero Road, on Nakasero Hill, opposite Rwenzori House. The new headquarters building was commissioned by Ruhakana Rugunda, the Prime Minister of Uganda, in July 2018.
History
NWSC was formed by Decree No. 34 in 1972 to serve the urban areas of Kampala, Entebbe, and Jinja. In 1995, NWSC was re-organized under the NWSC Statute. The company was given more authority and autonomy and the mandate to operate and provide water and sewerage services in areas entrusted to it, on a sound commercial and viable basis. As of October 2016, the following cities and towns receive services from NWSC:
| City | Town | Municipality |
|---|---|---|
| Kampala | Bushenyi | Kateete |
| Kira | Kigumba | Luweero |
| Gulu | Paidha | Buyanja |
| Jinja | Kitagata | Butogota |
| Entebbe | Wakiso | Kebisoni |
| Mbale | Pader | Kamwenge |
| Masaka | Kaliro | Kajjansi |
| Mbarara | Malaba | Kanyampanga |
| Hoima | Kisoro | Nyakagyeme |
| Kasese | Iganga | Kaberamaido |
| Mukono | Ishaka | Kanungu |
| Arua | Rukungiri | Aduku |
| Masindi | Amuria | Nebbi |
| Soroti | Apac | Kalisizo |
| Kitgum | Wobulenzi | Kihihi |
| Bombo | Kabwohe | Nyamirama |
| Kabale | Kiryandongo | Kalaki |
| Lira | Lyantonde | Oteboi |
| Tororo | Kalisizo | Kanyantorogo |
| Fort Portal | Kambuga | Atilis |
| Mubende | Ibanda | Rwerere |
| Njeru | Lugazi | Kangyenyi |
| Mityana | Ssabagabo | Itendero |
Expansion plans
In 2011, NWSC began implementing a program to improve water supply to the Kampala Metropolitan Area that includes Kampala City, Wakiso District, Mukono District, Nansana, Ssabagabo, and Kira. The program, which will cost €212 million, is financed by the government of Uganda (€34 million), KfW (€20 million grant), the European Investment Bank (€75 million loan), the French Development Agency (€75 million loan), and the European Union Infrastructure Trust Fund (€8 million grant).
NWSC is planning a new water treatment plant (Katosi Water Works), in Katosi in Mukono District with the capacity to supply 120000 m3 of water daily. The plans also include the refurbishment of the Ggaba complex of water treatment plants (Ggaba 1, Ggaba 2 and Ggaba 3). The Katosi source of water would complement the existing sources that have a daily capacity of 160000 m3.{{cite web | url=http://www.water-technology.net/news/news116532.html | title=Uganda to Build $306m Water Treatment Plant in Katosi | publisher=Water-technology.net| date=18 April 2011 | author=Water Technology |access-date=21 July 2015}}
In December 2015, NWSC announced plans to start serving some of Uganda's rural areas. As of March 2018, NWSC offered its services in 225 Ugandan towns and planned to connect services to 12,000 villages within its service areas by 2020.
Power plant to operate Ggaba water treatment plants
In October 2014, NWSC advertised for a private partner to build, own, and operate a 7 megawatt independent power station to meet the company's energy needs at its Ggaba I, Ggaba II, and Ggaba III water treatment plants. This would lower NWSC's power bill, which stood at approximately USh 24 billion (approx. US$6.5 million) annually, accounting for 35 percent of total operating expenditure. When procured, the partner will sign a 20-year power purchase agreement with NWSC, which will have the option of selling any excess power to the national grid.
Organizational structure
NWSC has numerous divisions, each headed by a director, general manager, senior manager, or manager.{{cite web | url=https://www.nwsc.co.ug/index.php/about-us/our-structure
Board of directors
NWSC is governed by a five-member board of directors. Engineer Badru Kiggundu is the chairman and Engineer Silver Mugisha is the managing director and chief executive officer.{{cite web |url=https://www.nwsc.co.ug/board-of-directors/ |title= Board of Directors: National Water and Sewerage Corporation |work=National Water and Sewerage Corporation | date=14 July 2022 |author=National Water and Sewerage Corporation |access-date=14 July 2022 |location=Kampala, Uganda}}
References
References
- SoftPower. (24 July 2020). "Engineer Badru Kiggundu Unveiled As New Chairperson Of NWSC Board". SoftPower Uganda.
- Ephraim Kasozi. (4 March 2014). "Water Body Confirms Dr Mugisha As Managing Director". [[Daily Monitor]].
- Bridget Nsimenta. (20 February 2025). "AfWASA Congress: Homegrown solutions, partnerships essential for water access, says NWSC's Mugisha". Nile Post Uganda.
- National Water and Sewerage Corporation. (30 June 2016). "Profile of National Water and Sewerage Corporation". National Water and Sewerage Corporation.
- Little Gate Publishing. (27 October 2016). "Water for All: National Water and Sewerage Corporation". Little Gate Publishing.
- ChimpReports. (16 October 2024). "NWSC Boosts Water Production Capacity by 85% to Support Uganda’s Growing Population". ChimpReports.
- Eagle Reporter. (1 September 2017). "NWSC to unveil new state-of-the-art offices". Eagle Uganda.
- Ssebwami, Javira. (31 March 2018). "NWSC reveals plans to shift head offices". PMLDaily.com.
- Chimp Corps. (21 July 2018). "Rugunda Launches NWSC Ambitious Corporate Plan". Chimp Reports Uganda.
- European Commission. (25 July 2018). "Kampala Water - Lake Victoria Water And Sanitation Sector (WATSAN)". [[European Commission]].
- European Investment Bank. (27 October 2016). "Kampala Water: Lake Victoria Water and Sanitation Project (Uganda)". European Investment Bank.
- EABW Staff. (10 December 2013). "Uganda: Kampala in U.S.$280 Million Revamp for City Water". [[East African Business Week]] (EABW) via [[AllAfrica.com]].
- Otage, Stephen. (18 December 2015). "NWSC registers heavy profits". [[Daily Monitor]].
- The Ugandan. (21 March 2018). "NWSC Kicks Off Project To Connect Water To 12000 Villages". The Ugandan.
- Julius Businge. (10 November 2014). "NWSC eyes own power plant". [[The Independent (Uganda)]].
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