Title: KfW Delhi Presentation
1Aapni Yojna
Integrated Water Supply, Sanitation and Health
Education Programme in Churu, Hanumangarh and
Jhunjhunu Districts Rajasthan, India USER
REPRESENTATION IN RURAL WATER SUPPLY IN RAJASTHAN
2Why Aapni Yojna?
Aapni Yojna
- Water scarcity and frequent droughts
- Poor services by existing WS schemes
- Poor quality of ground water
Non-Potable Water Potable Water High Fl
content High TDS content High Nitrate content
TDS 25863 ppm Chloride 9800 ppm Nitrate
350 ppm Fluorides 4.2 ppm
3Aapni Yojna
Mission Improve the health status and living
conditions of the target population by providing
safe and potable water round the clock with
assured good pressure
- Objectives
- Reduction of wastage of water
- Cost recovery
- Awareness building for reasonable water
consumption - Construction of low cost sanitation
- Womens development and health education
activities - Rehabilitation of traditional sources
4Project Background
Aapni Yojna
- Present Phase 1
- Area 7500Km 2
- Households 57,820
- Population(91) 423,379
- Villages 370
- Towns 2
- Cost INR 4260 mil.
- Source IGNP
- surface water
5Aapni Yojna
Project interventions
- Community Participation Unit (CPU) facilitates
community participation and users group
representation - Formation of Water Health Committees (WHC)
responsible for - Village level water management
- Equitable water distribution
- Reduction of wastage of water
- Contractual agreement with Project Management
Cell (PMC) - Village level Operation Maintenance
6Aapni Yojna
- Community participation (especially women) in
site selection for Public Stand Posts (PSP) and
Cattle Water Troughs - Participation in decision making and
implementation of sanitation measures through
sanitation representative of WHC - Health education with community groups (Self
Help, Adolescent Girls, PSP User Groups, school
sanitation committees) - Womens empowerment by promoting income
generation activities among Self Help Groups
7Aapni Yojna
Achievements
- Water Supply functional - 339 vil
- WHCs formed - 361 vil
- WHC-PMC agreement - 360 vil
- Voluntary labour- 336 vil
- Sanitation units - 18055
- Self Help Groups - 220
8Aapni Yojna
Achievements (cont.)
- Man-days sanitation unit construction 3,61,100
- Total Saving in SHGs INR 33,49,546
- Trench digging by villagers INR 12,300,000 (1228
km) - Security money deposited INR 25,23,960
- Water fees deposited INR 4,32,84,121
- Corpus fund with WHCs INR 36,00,000
9Achievements (cont.)
Aapni Yojna
- Major technical components completed or near
completion - 2 new 2 rehabilitated Water Treatment Plants
(8,600 m3/hr) - 13 Pumping Stations
- 3 Raw water reservoirs (3 mil m3)
- 7 Clear water reservoirs (4,350 m3)
- Trunk mains (188 km, 600-1100mm)
- Dist. mains (1635 km, 90-315mm)
- 43 Elevated Service Reservoirs
- Voice Communication System
- Dedicated 33 kV electrical grid
10Aapni Yojna
Critical Success Factors
- Comprehensive social mobilization with
participatory approach - Capacity building of WHCs and good rapport of
project staff with community - Efficient and effective role of catalyst
- Team of dedicated field staff stationed all over
project area - Legally binding agreement between WHC and Project
Management Cell - Clearly defined roles and responsi-bilities
strengthen commitment of community
11Aapni Yojna
- Critical Success Factors.. cont
- Payment for water to cover OM cost
- Good quality of construction
- Village water fund
- Fostering trust and partnership between PMC and
villagers - Empowered village level institutions accepting
responsibilities of bill payment and OM - Acceptance of community participation by the
stakeholders - Women involved in every step of project
implementation
12Aapni Yojna
13Aapni Yojna
Lessons for sustainability replicability
- Coordination and integration between social
technical wings is crucial and requires dedicated
cooperation among stakeholders - Negotiations and agreement on institutional
arrangements for OM and project governance need
to be concluded in the 1st half of the project
period - Especially in drought prone areas projects should
support drought-proof Income Generation
Activities to ensure financial sustainability
14Aapni Yojna
Lessons for sustainability replicability
- Continuous learning process for capacity building
- Sufficient time for follow-up activities to
facilitate sustainability - Communities can monitor construction work of
contractors at village level - Contractual agreement between service providers
and community about the level of responsibility
and service strengthens community commitment to
the project
15Proposed Institutional Model for Aapni Yojna
Regulatory Agency (GoR)
Aapni Yojna Peoples Water Utility
Governance Body
Chief Executive Officer
Chief Executive Officer
Management Organization
Technical Wing
Consumer Wing
Financial Wing
Technical Wing
Consumer Wing
Financial Wing
Private
Private
Sector
Sector
OM Organizations
Operator
Operator
16Mechanism for Community Representation in
Proposed Institutional Model
GoR (IAS)
CAO
ZP
CE
PP
NGO
PP?
PP
Project Governance / Policy Making
Pani Panchayat Federation-1
WHCs and PPs representation
Cluster coordination Stock of tools and spares
Development initiatives
Pani Panchayats-40
Water and Health Committees-370
Village Level OM of Water Supply Health
Sanitation Initiatives
17Aapni Yojna
Thank you!