Tanzania To Receive USD 300m From World Bank For Dar es Salaam Metropolitan Development Project

The World Bank (WB) has approved USD 300 million in credit from the International Development Association (IDA) for the new Dar es Salaam Metropolitan Development Project (DMPD).

The projects will improve urban services for 1.9 million residents in the Tanzanian capital and, indirectly, for the city’s overall population of 4.6 million.

DMDP will improve the key services to address congestion, flooding, urban mobility, growth of informal settlements and basic infrastructure in low-income communities that are affecting Dar es Salaam.

Dar es Salaam, whose population growth rate averaged 5.6% between 2002 and 2012, is among fastest growing cities in the world.

“With more than 800,000 new job seekers entering the market every year, many are looking to Dar es Salaam for opportunities. In 15 years Dar es Salaam will be a mega city with a population of over 10 million residents.” said Philippe Dongier, World Bank Tanzania Country Director.

“Investments over the next five years are key to help establish the foundations to develop and manage a booming metropolitan area – one that allows enterprises to thrive, that create productive jobs, and that provides an improved quality of life to its residents.” Dongier added.

Want to know more about Construction in Tanzania? Our free Tanzania Business and Investment Guide 2026 covers Construction, plus regulations, key sectors, and investment opportunities—all in one place.

Download Free Guide
Related Posts
Russia Maxim Reshetnikov Tanzania Kitila Mkumbo
Read More

Tanzania and Russia Agree to Open Industry, Energy, and Infrastructure to Joint Investment

Tanzania and Russia have agreed to deepen investment cooperation in industry, energy, transport infrastructure, and air transport, with value-addition processing, production technology, and goods transportation named as priority areas at the Third Joint Intergovernmental Commission held in Arusha on 15–16 May 2026, which drew 120 Russian companies. The deals also cover Russian investment in mining, agriculture, and ICT, direct Air Tanzania (ATCL) flights to Russia, and a signed agreement to promote the Swahili language in Russia.