Title: USAID and Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene
1USAID andWater Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene
Anthony Kolb Bureau for Econ Growth, Agriculture
and Trade U.S. Agency for International
Development akolb_at_usaid.gov
John Borrazzo, Ph.D. Bureau for Global
Health U.S. Agency for International Development
2A History of USAID Water Supply, Sanitation and
Hygiene
- 1980-1994 Evolution from pumps and pipes to
institutions and training, some hygiene - 1994-2004 Increasing emphasis on health
outcomes, behaviors, and the enabling
environment - 2004-present Diverse activities, e.g. Hygiene
Improvement Project, integrated programs,
partnerships (Coke, PG), utility reform, finance
- Recent Influences Senator Paul Simon Water for
the Poor Act of 2005
3Not a simple sector
- USAID has no overarching water-related objective
- Part of
- Health
- Natural Resources Management
- Financing/credit activities
- Economic growth
- Education
- Democracy and Governance
- Infrastructure
- Humanitarian Assistance
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7Examples of USAID WSH activities
- Hygiene improvement and POU water treatment
- Urban utility governance and financing
- Water supply in the context of water resources
management - X-cutting Partnerships
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9The assumption that improved water supply is
safe is often false
- Need for storage often unsafe or unhygienic
- Improper handling during transport and use
10Mean 262 CFU Median 62 CFU WHO low risk lt10 CFU
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13Point-of-use Water Treatment and Safe StorageA
Proven Intervention
- Proven technology (efficacy) chlorine, combined
flocculent-chlorine, solar disinfection, ceramic
filters, biosand filters (emerging evidence) - Proven benefits in field settings under
conditions of actual use (effective) typical
range of outcomes is 30-50 reduction in
diarrheal disease - Proven program strategies (sustainable,
scaleable, affordable, cost-effective) current
USAID strategy focuses on social marketing,
community-based communication and sales, private
sector driven
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15Urban problems are severe and require innovative
solutions
16Finding Urban WASH Solutions
- Link poor communities with service providers
- Balanced improvement of infrastructure-behaviors
- Re-emphasize sanitation (lagging everywhere)
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18Possible Modes of Collaboration
- Support to common implementing partners (country
level) - Complimentary actions (Example policy advocacy
supporting program implementation) - Global Development Alliances (GDA) partnering
strategically, especially with private sector
19West Africa Water Initiative (WAWI)
- Partnership reducing waterborne disease in
Niger-Mali-Ghana - Partners
- Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, Cornell, Desert
Research Institute, Helen Keller Institute,
International Trachoma Initiative, Lions Club,
UNICEF, USAID, WaterAid, World Chlorine Council,
World Vision, and Winrock - So far
- Education activities
- 131 school health/sanitation clubs
- gt1100 wells drilled or rehabilitated
- 25,000 latrines constructed
20Take-home messages
- USAID has diverse interests in water supply,
sanitation, and hygiene - Most USAID resources are field driven, in over
eighty countries around the world - FY08 appropriations legislation signed in
December 2007 requires USAID to spend 125
million out of 300 million total for WSH in
sub-Saharan Africa - USAIDs water supply, sanitation, and related
activities are still small relative to the scale
of the problem ? need for innovative
cost-effective partnerships programs.