The Angola Government and the World Bank are intensifying strategic cooperation in the energy and water sectors, reinforcing a long-standing partnership aimed at improving infrastructure, service delivery and institutional capacity.
In early 2026, senior officials from Angola’s Ministry of Energy and Water convened with a World Bank delegation in Luanda to review ongoing projects and explore opportunities for expanding support across both sectors. The discussions covered project implementation challenges and joint technical solutions to ensure that strategic objectives are met efficiently.
Angola’s engagement with the World Bank in the water sector is not new. The two partners have collaborated on a series of initiatives designed to improve access to potable water, bolster institutional performance and enhance resilience to climate impacts. These include longstanding programmes such as the Luanda Bita Water Supply Guarantee Project, which aims to expand reliable water service coverage in Luanda Province and surrounding areas.
World Bank support for Angola’s water infrastructure extends to climate resilience financing and institutional development efforts that benefit both urban and rural communities across multiple provinces. The bank’s interventions seek to ensure that water systems can withstand climate extremes while delivering sustainable services to households and businesses.
In the energy sector, cooperation has centred on strengthening operational performance and expanding electricity access. World Bank-supported frameworks have helped address structural challenges in distribution and commercial operations, with the goal of improving reliability in major urban centres and selected regions.
Angola’s Minister of Energy and Water underscored the strategic importance of the bank as a key development partner, noting that engagement in both energy and water domains represents the largest volume of cooperation with the financial institution.
For Angola, deepened cooperation with the World Bank brings multiple benefits: enhanced access to long-term financing, targeted technical expertise, and institutional strengthening that supports service delivery. In parallel, reliable energy and water infrastructure are essential enablers of private investment, industrial activity and social development. Improved utilities can reduce business costs, foster economic resilience and improve quality of life for citizens.
The ongoing dialogue and project pipeline signal a calibrated approach to tackling core infrastructure challenges, blending international support with national priorities.
As Angola continues to expand and modernise its utility sectors, sustained partnership with multilateral institutions like the World Bank will remain central to securing capital, technical capacity and governance reforms. This cooperation aligns with broader national development plans that prioritise inclusive growth, economic diversification and climate resilience.
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