IFB Name: Advanced Science & Partnerships for Integrated Resource Development (ASPIRED) Project; Supply of Materials and Implementation of Construction Work under Irrigation Optimization Project in Hovtashat Village of Ararat Region.
IFB Number: IFB # 240519-01
ASPIRED is soliciting Bids for the supply of PE pipes and fittings and provision of PE pipe welding and pipeline mounting work as well as construction of a valve chamber and a pumping station under Irrigation Optimization Project in Hovtashat Village of Ararat Region.
Download the full IFB document for submission details
Bids must be submitted no later than 17:00, Yerevan Time, on June 11, 2019. Each bidder must submit one hard copy of the bid to USAID ASPIRED Project office at CITADEL Business Center, 105/1, Teryan Street, Suite 204, Yerevan.
On Friday, April 19, ASPIRED completed a full-week training course on GIS mapping for the staff of the Water Resources Management Agency (WRMA) of the Ministry of Nature Protection. Designed by the request of the WRMA as a follow-up on the GIS courses conducted by the ASPIRED in the past, this training improved the participants’ skills in the practical use of the GIS, namely working with various types of data and design of thematic maps, statistical data generation, data exporting, etc.
Celebrated globally on
March 22, the World Water Day highlights the importance of water for humanity
and promotes sustainable water resource management around the world. This year’s theme for the World Water Day is “Leaving
No One Behind” to encourage united efforts that will ensure water availability
for all.
Access to water and
sustainable management of water resources still remain challenges for Armenia.
There is an increasing pressure on the water systems throughout the country for
drinking, agriculture, energy generation, and industrial production. One of the country’s priority issues is the
critical depletion of groundwater reserves in the Ararat Valley, the country’s
key agricultural hub. Based on USAID’s
assessment in 2014, the uncontrolled use of artesian water has shrunk the
groundwater basin by almost 10 meters
on average. Groundwater shortages have
serious implications on the country’s agricultural sector, the socio-economic
well-being of the region, as well as the safety and security of the Metsamor
nuclear power plant which uses the artesian water for its cooling system. More than 30 communities of Ararat and
Armavir provinces currently face problems with drinking or irrigation water
supply.
The USAID Advanced
Science and Partnerships for Integrated Resource Development (ASPIRED) project,
managed by the ME&A Inc., assists the Government of Armenia in developing
policy and technical solutions for more sustainable abstraction and use of the
groundwater resources of the Ararat Valley.
The five-year ASPIRED marked this World Water Day through a public
event, presenting the project’s mid-term accomplishments in 2015-2018. USAID Armenia Mission Director Deborah
Grieser, Armenia’s Minister of Nature
Protection Erik Grigoryan, representatives of the Armenian government and water
sector stakeholders were in attendance.
During the event,
ASPIRED presented the advanced tools it has developed for more informed
decision-making on groundwater management in the Ararat Valley: a 3-dimensional
model of the groundwater basin and the computer-based Decision Support System
(DSS). The 3D model of the Ararat Basin
demonstrates the hydrogeologic structure and the water bearing potential of the
basin. The DSS allows to assess water
availability in natural conditions and analyze both human and climate change
impacts on the water resources.
In addition, ASPIRED
has completed four water saving projects.
The project has introduced the concept of secondary use of fish-farm
water for irrigation needs in Hayanist and Sayat-Nova communities, returning
100 hectares of abandoned community farmlands back to cultivation and creating
income-generating opportunities for 183 households. ASPIRED has also sealed a damaged artesian
well in Sipanik community. With an
outflow of 60 liters per second, the well water had been leaking into and
flooding the neighborhood for years.
Apart
from showcasing modern approaches to water and energy saving and conservation,
the USAID ASPIRED project emphasizes the human and environmental impact of its
activities which will improve the lives of 23,000 people and help preserve 9.2
million cubic meters of precious groundwater in the Ararat Valley.
Going forward, together
with its local partners, ASPIRED is implementing infrastructure projects in
four communities of Armavir and Ararat marzes. An innovative aquaculture
technology center in Armavir is also underway through joint efforts with a
private fishery.
From
February 20 to March 4, the international expert Gerard Pinto, Associate
Research Scientist, PhD from Marine Science Research Institute, Jacksonville
University, provided consultancy for the newly built Aquaculture Technology
Transfer Center (ATTC) – a pilot project implemented by the USAID’s Advanced
Science and Partnerships for Integrated Resource Development Project (ASPIRED).
His visit was organized by the USAID John Ogonowski and Dough Bereuter Farmer-to-Farmer
Program (F2F), marking the start of effective partnership with the ASPIRED
Project.
Implemented
jointly with a private fishery in Armavir, the ATTC is intended to serve as an
experimental ground for testing, validating and demonstrating various
aquaculture technologies and methods at smaller scale to be captured and
utilized by other fisheries once being successful. The methods include water
recirculation, airlifting, biological treatment of water, biofiltration, aquaponics,
etc. In addition to producing sturgeon, the farmer also plans breeding Australian
crayfish – a popular species among the aquaculture farms in different
countries.
With
his specific expertise in rearing of Australian crayfish, Gerard Pinto worked
with the fish-farmer and ASPIRED specialists to recommend best practices and low-cost
solutions that will help to improve the efficiency of existing technical
facilities and ensure the sustainability of the farm. He also enriched the
Crayfish Farming Manual based on his own practical experience in aquaculture,
which was initially developed by the Birthright Armenia Volunteer for ASPIRED
Project, Talene Baghdassarian. ASPIRED Project will share the Manual with the
ATTC farmer and other interested fisheries. Gerard Pinto, who completed his
first volunteer assignment in Armenia, remarked that ATTC would make an
excellent venue for research purposes and testing of various aquaculture
technologies.
Cooperation
between different USAID projects produces added value for the projects and
their beneficiaries. ASPIRED Project seeks collaborative opportunities with
various organizations and donor-funded projects that allows bringing additional
resources and expertise to the project.
ME&A, the implementer of the USAID-funded Advanced Science and Partnerships for Integrated Resource Development Project, is soliciting proposals for preparation of engineering design, bill of quantities, and cost estimate under the Urban irrigation System Optimization Project in Vedi Town of Ararat Marz.
Proposals must be received no later than 17:00, Yerevan Time, on March 7, 2019. Offerors must submit one hard copy in Armenian of their Technical and Cost Proposals to the ASPIRED Project office at CITADEL Business Center, 105/1, Teryan Street, Suite 204, Yerevan
On February 15, ASPIRED Project hosted the first session of the working group on the development of the method of assessment of self-purification capacity of rivers. The working group includes both technical experts and the representatives of the stakeholder ministries.
Qasakh river was selected as the pilot river for the elaboration of the method which will take into consideration such water quality, hydrological, biological and hydro-morphological characteristics of rivers. Upon elaboration the method will be presented to the Government.
ME&A, the implementer of the USAID-funded ASPIRED Project, is soliciting proposals for preparation of engineering design, bill of quantities, and cost estimate under the Irrigation System Optimization Project in Hovtashat Village of Ararat Marz.
View the enclosed RFP document for the details related to the submission deadline and procedures:
Proposals must be received no later than 17:00, Yerevan Time, on February 15, 2019. Offerors must submit one hard copy in Armenian of their Technical and Cost Proposals to the ASPIRED Project office at CITADEL Business Center, 105/1, Teryan Street, Suite 204, Yerevan.
For two weeks, from January 14 to January 25, the ASPIRED
Project conducted the training course on the new calculation method of the
ecological flow in the Armenian rivers. The new method of determination of the
ecological flow has been developed by the Clean Energy and Water Program of
USAID in 2015 and adopted by the Government of Armenia in January 2018.
Realizing the need for additional training, the
Water Resources Management Agency of the Ministry of Nature Protection
requested USAID that the ASPIRED Project experts, who elaborated the method,
provide in-depth training to the specialists of the Ministry estimating the
ecological flow values as part of water use permitting and compliance
assurance.
Combining both theory and practice, the course was
a useful learning experience for the participants – the specialists of the
various divisions of the Ministry of Nature Protection, Ministry of
Agriculture, the Inspectorate for Nature Protection and Mineral Resources of
the Government of Armenia. Starting from the general overview of the data
management, GIS systems and general hydrology, the course gradually expanded to
the method of determination of monthly and annual ecological flow values of
both studied and unstudied rivers of Armenia, using Arpa River as an example. The
participants received the user manual, the template file in MS Excel as well as
the geodatabase (the GIS files) needed for the calculation of the ecological
flow.
At the end, the participants commended the ASPIRED
Project for putting together a comprehensive and very interactive course which
equipped the specialist with new working tools and skills. During the
certificates award ceremony, Christine Khanoyan from the Ministry of
Agriculture noted, “I would like to use the opportunity to say big thanks to
the trainers who did an incredible job delivering the content and answering all
questions with patience. I am excited to implement the new knowledge into my
work.”
On December 21, the ASPIRED Project signed two sub-contract agreements with Armplast LLC for the implementation of the drinking water projects in Yeghegnut and Aratashen villages, Armavir region. More about the projects in our Pilot Projects Section
On December 19, the USAID Assistant Administrator Brock Bierman stopped in Sayat-Nova village while visiting various USAID-supported project sites in the region. In September 2018, ASPIRED and its partners completed the irrigation improvement project in Sayat-Nova community, by using the outlet water of Masis-Dzuk fishery.
Mr. Bierman met with the village mayor and the farmers to discuss the positive impact of the new irrigation system on the socio-economic situation of the community. 98 households got an opportunity to resume cultivation of their farmlands which have been left idle for nearly 20 years. Some farmers have already planted winter wheat this season and plan to grow more high-value crops next year which can earn them more income.