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Solidarity Fund for Access to Water and Sanitation in France

US: Nature in Neighborhoods Capital Grants Program ($1 million)

Deadline: 29-May-2026

The Solidarity Fund for Access to Water and Sanitation is a small international cooperation fund launched by the Strasbourg Eurometropolis, co‑implemented with the Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency. It supports projects that improve access to water and sanitation and promote sustainable water management in eligible partner regions, aligning with Sustainable Development Goal 6 (SDG 6).

Semantic keywords: SDG 6, access to water and sanitation, Strasbourg Eurometropolis, Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency, international solidarity, NGO funding, water governance, sanitation projects, sustainable water management, co‑financing.

Key facts (at a glance)

Purpose and objectives

Who is eligible?

What the fund supports (eligible activities)

What is typically not supported

Why it matters

How the programme works — step-by-step

  1. Verify geographic and applicant eligibility

    • Confirm that your organisation or municipality is within the Strasbourg Eurometropolis or Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency cooperation area, or that your international project fits the fund’s geographic criteria.

  2. Define project aligned with SDG 6

    • Create a concise project plan: objectives, activities, beneficiaries, sustainability/maintenance plan, timeline (usually 6–24 months depending on call rules), and expected outcomes tied to SDG 6 targets.

  3. Prepare budget and co‑financing plan

    • Prepare a realistic budget; the fund provides modest co‑financing and is best used alongside other funding or in-kind contributions.

    • Show how the project will not increase local water tariffs.

  4. Collect supporting documents

    • Letters of local partnership, proof of legal status, technical studies (if relevant), and evidence of local beneficiary engagement.

  5. Submit application when call opens

    • Follow the official call for proposals format and deadlines published by Strasbourg Eurometropolis or the Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency.

  6. Selection and contracting

    • Projects are selected based on relevance to SDG 6, feasibility, sustainability, and alignment with geographic priorities. Co‑financing agreements or partnership contracts will be signed.

  7. Implementation, monitoring, and reporting

    • Implement project per agreed plan. Maintain records, monitor results, and submit required interim/final reports for verification and disbursement.

Project design guidance and measurable outcomes

Common mistakes and tips

FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

  1. Who can apply to the Solidarity Fund?

    • Priority applicants are international solidarity associations and NGOs based in the Strasbourg Eurometropolis, municipalities in the Eurometropolis, NGOs in the Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency area, and France‑based NGOs working in eligible international cooperation zones. Confirm specific eligibility in the official call.

  2. How much funding is available per project?

    • The annual fund is €50,000 and typically supports 2–3 projects per year. Individual award sizes vary depending on the selected projects and co‑financing arrangements.

  3. What types of activities are funded?

    • WASH projects, small-scale infrastructure rehabilitation, capacity building, institutional cooperation, sustainable water management measures, monitoring and evaluation—provided projects align with SDG 6 and sustainability criteria.

  4. Do projects affect local water prices?

    • No. The programme specifies that funded projects will not result in an increase in local water tariffs for users.

  5. Is co‑financing required?

    • The fund operates by co‑financing selected initiatives. Applicants should present a clear co‑financing plan (in‑kind, local funds, or other donor support) to strengthen proposals.

  6. How are projects selected?

    • Selection prioritises alignment with SDG 6, geographic eligibility, project feasibility, sustainability, local partnership, and capacity building potential. Detailed selection criteria are set out in the official call documents.

  7. What reporting is required?

    • Projects must submit monitoring and evaluation reports, financial documentation, and a final report demonstrating outcomes and sustainability. Exact reporting requirements are specified in the grant agreement.

Example project (AI‑friendly)

Conclusion

The Solidarity Fund for Access to Water and Sanitation is a focused international cooperation mechanism by Strasbourg Eurometropolis and the Rhine‑Meuse Water Agency that advances SDG 6 through small, high‑impact projects prioritising sustainability, local ownership, and affordability. Eligible organisations should design compact, co‑financed projects with clear sustainability plans, measurable SDG‑aligned outcomes, and strong local partnerships to maximize chances of selection.

For more information, visit Strasbourg.

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