The Guyana government has announced plans to embark upon the largest investment in drainage and irrigation in the country’s history as part of the Low Carbon Development Strategy (LCDS) 2030.
President Irfaan Ali, meeting with members of the LCDS Multi-Stakeholder Steering Committee (MSSC) said the works will upgrade more than 1,500 kilometres of drainage canals, over 300 kokers, and 180 pumps nationwide.
“This work will transform the coastal plains, protecting more than 130 square kilometres of urban land and 1,270 square kilometres of agricultural land”, President Ali said, adding “it will enhance the resilience of 320,000 people against more intense rainstorms and rising sea levels”.
Ali explained that new high-level relief canals, including the Hope-like systems, are being designed and built and that these canals will allow water to drain even when tides are high, a critical safeguard for communities along the coast.
“These are real investments, not just words, in our land, our people, and our future”, he said, noting that the project is a key component of the LCDS 2030, which is fully integrated into every aspect of Guyana’s development agenda.
“Every development plan we pursue has the LCDS and the ideals of the LCDS built into those plans”, he said, outlining several complementary investments under the LCDS that are also transforming lives, including mangrove restoration, clean energy expansion, and community-led development projects.
“Our mangroves are a living shield, storing carbon, supporting fisheries, and protecting against the sea,” Ali said, adding that, “over the past decade, Guyana has restored more than 140 hectares of mangroves and planted over half a million seedlings, while investing nearly one billion Guyana dollars since 2020 in their protection and rehabilitation”.
Ali has also floated the possibility of covering a number of drains for use as paid parking by selected categories of persons.
“In some of the main drainage areas, we can design covered drains that corporations, companies who are now utilising the parapets can pay a fee and use for parking so we’re looking at an entire ecosystem in a holistic way so that we can have optimal solutions,” he said.
The Georgetown City Council’s parking meter project was scrapped in 2017 and Ali said there would be a rapid assessment of all existing surveys and studies aimed at crafting a drainage development plan and implementation schedule.
“The city has outgrown the capacity of those tunnel systems,” he said, adding that the government has information on the design capability and condition survey of all drains, outfalls, and pump stations.
Chief executive officer of the National Drainage and Irrigation Authority, Lionel Wordsworth said condition assessments of the 12 main canals, 12 main sluices and 14 pumps serving the city had been already completed, while the Commissioner of the Guyana Lands and Surveys Commission, Enrique Monize said it has obtained high-resolution images and “we will be able to produce digital terrain models, elevation models to assist this process.”
President Ali said the sewage system would be modernised and would include the construction of a treatment plant. The raw sewage is discharged into the Demerara River near the Coast Guard outpost.
Currently, the sewage system is overflowing or seeping into a number of areas of Georgetown such as on Robb Street and around the Guyana Post Office Corporation headquarters.
We are asking dwellers of the City to cooperate with the team as they seek to implement the first phase and that is clearing and cleaning of the parapets across the city,” he said.
CMC/gt/ir/2025
GEORGETOWN, Guyana, Nov 5, CMC –
