ASMARA
A private company in Eritrea has begun producing totally pure drinking water, which is expected to save the country over one million dollars a year and create new job opportunities.
Asmerom Russom, the owner of the factory at Mainefhi, some 20 km from the capital Asmara, told IRIN that the plant was producing 1,000 bottles an hour of pure water, devoid of any gas compound which means it can be drunk by children.
The factory, named 'Mai-liham pure water production', is expected to replace imported bottled water from western and Arab countries, thereby reducing hard currency expenditure by almost half, Asmerom said. "Our factory will save over one million US dollars a year," he stressed.
He added that the factory had also opened up over 100 job opportunities, which would be worked in three shifts.
Currently, one litre of imported water in Eritrea costs almost one US dollar. Asmerom said the price of his water would vary between 0.48 to 0.60 US cents a litre, depending on the size of the bottles.
"Taking into account the fact that only 10 percent of Eritreans have access to pure water, the contribution of this factory to our consumers will be vitally important," Asmerom pointed out.
"Ninety five percent of the ingredients necessary for producing the water are available here in the country," he added. The main source of water is only one kilometre from the factory.
The World Bank says that due to the devastating border war with Ethiopia from 1998-2000, about a third of Eritrea's workforce was under arms and thousands of people are still displaced. The economy has been declining as a result of the conflict - exacerbated by a severe drought currently gripping the country - and Eritrea is facing a dire shortage of foreign exchange.
This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions