Jordan is one of the driest, most water poor countries in the world, and population growth has put a strain on the country’s already limited water resources and aging infrastructure.
The As-Samra Wastewater Treatment Plant is the primary facility for treating wastewater from Jordan’s Amman and Zarqa Governorates, home to about 5 million people, but it was already nearing operational capacity. The plant was initially completed in 2008 with support from the U.S. Agency for International Development, and the Government of Jordan needed an innovative solution to fund the plant’s expansion to provide clean water for its growing population.

MCC
As part of the MCC-Jordan Compact, the agency provided $93 million to help the Government of Jordan finance the expansion of the As-Samra Wastewater Treatment Plant, which treats 70 percent of the nation’s wastewater. MCC’s investment helped mobilize an additional $110 million from the private sector and $20 million from the Government of Jordan.
The project was financed through a structure known as build-operate-transfer, a type of public-private partnership in which the government delegates the responsibilities of financing, designing, building, operating and maintaining facilities to a private-sector entity for a set amount of time. In the case of As-Samra, the private company was the Samra Wastewater Treatment Plant Company Limited (SPC), whose international investors include Morganti, a U.S. affiliate of the Greece-based Consolidated Contractors Group; Infilco Degremont, a U.S. affiliate of the France-based Suez Environment; and Suez Environment. These investors and a syndicate of local Jordanian banks and financial institutions, led by the Arab Bank, were the project’s private-sector financiers. SPC will operate and maintain the As-Samra plant until 2037, when it will be transferred back to the Government of Jordan.
Public-private partnerships play an important role in helping MCC achieve its mission of reducing poverty through economic growth. With limited foreign assistance available, governments around the world are looking for opportunities to partner with the private sector to supply water, sanitation, transportation, power, public health and other much-needed services.
In Jordan, the public-private partnership financing structure multiplies MCC’s investment impact and furthers the project’s sustainability. The partnership has helped make the Jordan Compact one of MCC’s most successful — transforming a key element of Jordan’s water sector on time and under budget. The innovative approach will serve as a model as MCC works with its partner countries to mobilize and attract the capital, expertise and efficiency of the private sector to deliver high-quality, affordable and sustainable development outcomes.
Check out more stories, videos and graphics about the Jordan Compact on our feature page.