Speeches
REMARKS BY USAID ADMINISTRATOR HENRIETTA FORE Ms. FORE: It is my pleasure to welcome all of you on behalf of the United States Agency for International Development to the USAID “Alliance of the Year” Award event. I would like to particularly extend a warm welcome, not only to Mr. Neville Isdell, the Chief Executive Officer of The Tonight's celebration is a real opportunity for USAID to highlight the importance that we place on deepening and broadening the impact of our development assistance by forging creative, catalytic, and innovative partnerships with the private sector. The challenges we face, as a planet, and throughout the developing world are enormous, and none of us can address these problems alone. The USAID Global Development Alliance model combines United States foreign assistance funding and local country assistance commitment with the expertise, resources and creativity of leading private sector institutions. Joining forces has greatly increased the impact of development assistance around the world. Since Fiscal Year 2001, USAID has committed $2.3 billion to approximately 650 public/private partnerships worldwide; and in return these alliances have leveraged over $6.8 billion in contributions from more than 1,700 distinct partners. USAID is working actively to increase the value and deepen the impact of these alliances, everywhere that the Agency works.Each year USAID takes special pride in recognizing the achievements of our most successful and high-impact public/private partnerships and alliances. For 2007, it is our great pleasure to bestow this honor on The It is fitting that we are gathered here, on this night, just a few days after World Water Day, to celebrate a partnership that is focused on finding sustainable, and scaleable, solutions to the serious water problems facing the developing countries around the world. As many of you know, water is a high priority issue for the United States government foreign assistance. For its part, With more than $14 million of combined funding, to date, the (WADA) Alliance is currently addressing critical community water needs in 17 countries around the world, providing a broad range of benefits to over 250,000 people in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, and Latin America, and plans are underway to expand activities to more countries this year. Our hope is that we will, eventually, fully mainstream the relationship between our two institutions, and encourage a proliferation of jointly-developed activities that respond to the local needs throughout countries where both partners have a presence.The WADA alliance with The Alliance serves as an exemplary model for other private sector actors to adopt sound water management practices in their own activities and communities. Additionally, WADA directs -- supports the health and well-being and the livelihoods of the communities in which the company and USAID both operate, providing substantial and tangible progress toward our development goals. For all of these reasons, USAID's partnership with
REMARKS BY MR. ISDELL Mr. ISDELL: Good evening, everyone. And Ambassador Fore -- or, I should really say Henrietta, because that's the way that we operate together today, Your Excellencies, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen. I'm really here tonight to accept this award on behalf of the nearly 1 million people that work in the I am humbled to be with you, the leaders of USAID with representatives of the 17 countries -- and there will be more to come - in which we work. And also with the many partners and stakeholders -- because that multiplier is very, very important -- that we work with around the world. My Childhood Train Trip Through Africa in 1954 [Imagine] the eyes of a 10-year-old boy, looking out, first of all from the beauty of Cape Town, across the barren Karoo, even in that January, a fairly dry, then Bechuanaland, [now] Botswana, the magnificence and, if we come back to water, the unbelievable flow of the Victoria Falls, Mosi-oa-Tunya. And then, of course, through the rains and the thunder of the January rainy season to arrive in Zambia. During those three and a half days, I think more was formulated in me, and in my own mind, than any other time of my life. And during those years, living in Africa -- if you work it out, actually, it was some 26 years -- to some degree, I became an African. I felt connected to the soil, the warmth of the people, the countless individual generosities, and also the tragedies -- the fact that people didn't have access to basic sanitation. They had the resource of their own will power, but they didn't have the resource to be able to provide for themselves. Returning to Africa 45 Years Later To Launch Our Partnership with USAID It was on that very warm afternoon, a reaffirmation of actually, everything that Henrietta's talked about, because there were hundreds of people gathered together -- members of the community -- but there were government ministers. There were local officials. There were, very importantly, people like Alex Newton of USAID, and the U.S. Ambassador to Mali (Terence McCulley) was there, as well as our bottling partner (BGI), and obviously our other partners and neighbors. That wastewater treatment plant will allow us to use what was waste, unusable water -- not for individual consumption, because that marks some of our other projects -- but to provide to that community the ability to help them with irrigation of their crops. Our Global Partnership with USAID (17 Countries, Helping 250,000 People) Now, it's not just in Africa. Henrietta mentioned, it actually is around the globe that we're finally getting to the stage where we're actually able to build scale. We're actually able to think about the transformation of entire communities. “To Grow Exponentially, Be Collaborative” One of the sort of maxims that I live by and this is by “Mr. Anonymous” -- I don't know who wrote this -- but I love it, and they say,
Think about that because that, essentially, is what our partnership is with USAID. It's part of that journey that we have as The Coca-Cola Company to truly becoming, what I like to call, a 21st Century company. We Must Support Sustainable Communities to Become a 21st Century Company It's about sustainable communities. If we don't have sustainable communities, we don't have a sustainable business, period. Water’s Connection to Our Business I really want to thank you, Henrietta -- I'll go informal again -- for the work of all of your people around the world and for your partnership. But, I also want to thank the governments and the NGOs and also the local partners, because there are unsung heroes and heroines in every part of the world that we operate, who dedicate their lives to making their own communities that much better. Truly your efforts and their efforts are starting to make the world a better place, I hope not just incrementally, but exponentially. Because that really, not just defines where we're coming from, but absolutely defines our challenge together for the future. Thank you very much, indeed. Learn more about our partnership with USAID. # # # |