Title: Kala Vairavamoorthy
1WATER CONSERVATION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Kala Vairavamoorthy
2Water, Engineering and Development Centre
Education, training, research and consultancy for
improved planning, provision and management of
physical infrastructure and services for
development in low- and middle-income countries,
focusing on the needs and demands of the poor.
3STRUCTURE OF PRESENTATION
- Water Crisis that exists in developing countries
particularly the urban centres - How the water crisis is predicted to get worse in
the next 20 years. - How authorities in developing countries have
tried to manage the water crisis - How authorities in developing countries are
becoming more proactive in the way they manage
the water crisis.
4Providing a water supply for a community involves
tapping the most suitable source of water,
ensuring that it is safe for domestic consumption
and then supplying it in adequate quantities.
5The World Health Organisation defines
- safe water as . . water that does not contain
harmful chemical substances or micro-organisms in
concentrations that cause illness in any form - adequate waters supply as . . one that provides
safe water in quantities sufficient for drinking,
and for culinary, domestic, and other household
purposes so as to make possible the personal
hygiene of members of the household. A sufficient
quantity should be available on a reliable,
year-round basis near to, or within the household
where the water is to be used
6WATER SCARCITY
- Water scarcity in urban areas is of particular
concern because of migration of the rural
population to urban centres resulting in towns
and cities expanding rapidly - Water scarcity can result from a variety of
causes but principally either source limitation,
poor distribution, or inequality between the rich
and the poor. - What happens when there is a lack of water is all
to apparent in many developing country cities - Increase the health burden on the urban poor, who
often constitute the very labour source that
generates the cities wealth.
7DEVELOPMENT GOALS
- Water is acknowledged as a major limiting factor
in the socio-economic development of a world with
a rapidly expanding population. - The United Nations Millennium Declaration draws
attention to the importance of water and water
related activities in supporting development and
eradicating poverty. - Also emphasizes conservation to stop
unsustainable exploitation of water resources - By developing water management strategies at the
regional, national and local levels which promote
both equitable access and adequate supplies. - Improved water management promotes sustainable
development
8WATER MANAGEMENT
- Current approaches towards water supply in cities
are usually supply driven when theres a
shortage develop new sources. - But, the cost of developing new sources or
expanding existing sources is getting higher and
higher as most accessible water resources have
already been tapped (UNCHS 1999a) - An alternative approach, advocating water demand
management (WDM), focuses on conservation
measures to make better use of limited supplies. - It is often not realized that conservation does
not necessarily mean a reduction in quality of
service but rather a more efficient approach to
use. - WDM results in more sustainable water services
9WATER STRESS FACTS
- Africa
- 12 African countries considered to be in a Water
Stress situation. - Further 10 African countries will be stressed by
2025 (1.1 billion people or 2/3s Africas
population). - India
- At current rate of population growth India will
have the largest number of water-deprived persons
in the world in the next 25 years. - It is estimated that by the year 2050, half of
Indias population will be living in urban areas
and will face acute water problems.
10NON-IRRIGATION CONSUMPTION
Rosegrant et al. (2002)
11WATER QUALITY ISSUES
WHO et al. (2000)
12GOVERNMENTS ADOPT EXTREME MEASURES
- Since the water quantity available for supply
generally is not sufficient to meet the demands
of the population, water conservation measures
are employed. - In many countries the sector is historically
rather inefficient and tends to operate on a
crisis management basis. - Demand management limited and often arise from
dire need rather than good planning. - One of the most common methods of controlling
water demand is the use of intermittent supplies,
usually by necessity rather than design.
13For Example
- 91 of systems in South East Asia are
intermittent (WHO survey) - Practically all Indian cities are reported to
operate intermittent systems
14The water supply in Mumbai is not only
intermittent but inequitable
- 4 of the population receive water gt 8 hrs/day
- 33 receive water gt 4 hrs/day
- 42 receive water for just 3 hrs/day
- 21 receive water lt 3 hrs/day (often only 1 hr)
15Observations made in Chennai and Kochi where I.S
are the norm
- Overall shortage of water
- Insufficient pressures
- many areas had zero pressure
- Inequitable distribution of the available water
- Very short duration of supply
- West Kochi, supply for 2 hours a day (irregular)
- Outskirts of Madras, supply for 1 hour each day
16Serious problem arising from I.S is high levels
of contamination.
- Intermittent systems are empty for many hours of
the day at which time pollutants can enter
through leaks in the supply pipes.
17For Example
- Aurangabad, India
- High counts of faecal coliform in samples
collected from outlets during the 1st flush - Water collected 10 mins after the 1st flush were
also found to be contaminated (but lower) - Karachi, Pakistan
- In some zones of the Karachi WSS up to 80 of the
samples analysed were found to contain high
counts of faecal coliform
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23GOVERNMENTS RETHINKING THEIR APPROACH - WDM
- Saving water rather than the development of new
sources is often the best next source of water,
both from an economic and from an environmental
point of view. - Water demand management (WDM) therefore is seen
as the preferred alternative to meet increasing
water demand. - Main objective of WDM is to contribute to more
efficient and equitable provision of water
services - Many instruments have been developed for WDM
- Instruments are interdependent and mutually
reinforcing and the most optimal way they are
applied will depend on the prevailing local
conditions.
24BENEFITS OF WDM
- Attractive to governments as it can buy time by
delaying the need for large capital investment in
expansion of the water sector. - In most cases, the savings achieved by delaying
an investment can provide financial resources to
more than cover the costs of implementing a
comprehensive demand management programme. - Prospect of conserving water for industrial,
agricultural and commercial organisation is
always an attractive proposition as it almost
always results in a reduction of operation costs. - In many water short cities there is always a
proportion of the population who are without
adequate water supplies. By saving water in
higher income areas, more resources could be made
available to the poor. - In LDCs WDM must be used to promoted equity in
supply
25CONSTRAINTS TO WDM
- There are various obstacles and constraints to
overcome before the full potential of WDM
principles can be achieved. - Lack of awareness of WDM methods
- Lack of political will
- Lack of institutional framework
- Limited technical options
26METHODS ADOPTED FOR WDM
- Reducing unaccounted for water
- Leakage detection
- Reducing illegal connections and unmetered
connections - Water Restriction (intermittent Supplies)
- Retro-fitting
- Wastewater reuse
- Water Tariffs
- Public Awareness
- Conservation for Industry
27REDUCING UFW
- Unaccounted for water (UFW) may be defined and
that percentage of the water produced from the
raw water source which is not accounted for. - UFW is most often due to a combination of
- Leakage in bulk mains or secondary or tertiary
networks - Illegal connections or Un-metered connections
- In many countries the situation is growing
rapidly worse - Although leakage has remained relatively
constants, the major cause of UFW is illegal
connections.
28LEAKAGE DETECTION
- Leakage is often a large source of unaccounted
for water and is a result of either lack of
maintenance or failure to renew ageing systems. - In cities information does exist but there is a
lack of resources to undertake an efficient
leakage repair programme. - Leakage can also take place after a consumers
meter but is frequently neglected as the water
has been paid for. - In many cases leakage detection and repair will
require some additional capital investment and
human resources. - In many cities leakage is given a low level of
priority and in some cities is only really
accepted as a necessary evil, suffering from low
staff moral.
29ILLEGAL CONNECTIONS AND UNMETERED CONNECTIONS
- In city distribution systems, illegal connections
may be the result of contractors connecting
illegally to supply new housing developments or
unplanned and illegal settlements connecting to
such supplies. - Illegal connections are difficult to monitor
especially where access to settlement is hindered
(public order problems) - In some cases where previous supply systems were
unmetered or where have ceased to function
properly, a proportion of the consumers may not
be charged or pay a different price. - Before any WDM programme is implemented,
unmetered connections must be reduced to an
absolute minimum and metering coverage maximised
in all sectors.
30UNACCOUNTED FOR WATER
WHO et al. (2000)
31INSTALLATION OF METERS
WHO et al. (2000)
32SOURCES OF UFW
UNCHS (1999)
33RETRO-FITTING
- Retro-fitting provides one of the most effective
short-term options for reducing water demand. - Many government buildings or institutions do not
pay for their water or the consumers have no
interest in conservation. - Good examples are University campuses, Ministry
buildings, government hospitals etc. With very
little capital investment, usually only a few
dollars per fitting, water consumption may be
reduced by as much as 20 - Incentives are offered to those who retrofit
including, payment grants from local authorities
34WATER USE RESTRICTIONS (Intermittent Supply)
- Although regulations have a bad name, they are
often both appropriate and efficient for managing
water demand.
35GUIDELINES FOR DESIGN OF INTERMITTENT WATER
SYSTEMS
Research project (funded by DFID) to develop
guidelines that
- Provides guidance on designing systems that are
likely to operate intermittently. - Is novel in that it recognises the reality of
intermittent supply and hence provides new
methods of analysis and design, appropriate for
such systems. - Develop new performance objectives specifically
tailored to intermittent systems (equity in
supply adequate pressuresupply times that are
convenient)
36OBJECTIVES OF DESIGN PROCESS
- EQUITY IN SUPPLY
- Equitable distribution of the limited quantity of
water is the keystone of the whole design process
outlined in this manual and is a non-negotiable
design objective
37GUIDELINES - INTERMITTENT SYSTEM
GUIDELINES
SUPPLEMENTARY DOCUMENTS
38SPREADING THE WORD
- Pilot Studies
- Kochi network designed using guidelines
- Also guidelines being piloted in India (as part
of DFIDs APUSP) - Workshops
- Three workshops completed in India and East
Africa - Joining forces with UNCHS - Water
for African Cities Program - ASCE Task Committee
39MANAGEMENT OF WATER QUALITY IN URBAN NETWORKS
- 4 MAIN OUTPUTS
- Guidance to assessing hazards, critical control
points. - Manual and flow-charts on water quality
management and system monitoring tools for WS
managers - PC compatible water quality modelling tools.
- GIS based risk management tool that combines
hazard assessment procedures with water quality
software
40GIS
MODELS
Data Input
Input
Contaminant Ingress Model
User Interface (GUI)
Geographic Database Extraction Storage
Processing Mapping
Output
Input
Contaminant Propagation Model
Output
Display Reporting
Input
Risk Model
Output
41WASTEWATER REUSE
- Treated wastewater or in some cases urban runoff
or stormwater (rain water harvesting) could be
reused efficiently. - Botswana - Vegetable gardening area of 150 m² at
a clinic in Lobatse was irrigated with water from
sinks and hand basins. All waste water was
drained into drums dug into the ground . - Bulawayo - Final effluent from sewage treatment
works is treated for reuse on suburban parks,
golf courses, nurseries, schools - May require dedicated distribution system (may be
open to abuse and those urban poor without
adequate supply). - In many culture there is also a cultural taboo
about reusing wastes of all types. - This may have to be addressed in public awareness
campaigns.
42TARIFF STRUCTURES
- Tariff structures designed to conserve water must
penalize over use but not minimize access to the
urban poor. - Punitive tariff structure should consider setting
the basic needs tariff at a level affordable by
very poor households with significantly higher
tariffs imposed for consumption above the basic
needs level. - Bulaywao - rising block tariff - Cheap
consumption is limited to 600 litres per
household per day or 18 Kilo litres per month. - Block tariffs may penalize low-income users who
live in multi-family units in building with only
one meter (Whittington and Boland) - Other methods proposed include single volumetric
charge coupled with fixed monthly rebate (2 part
tariff). - Tariffs for industry and agricultural purposes
should not encourage wasteful use but should make
formal supply sources more attractive than
alternatives, which may have a detrimental effect
on the environment.
43CONSERVATION FOR INDUSTRY
- Targeting WDM strategies at industry may have a
much greater impact than focusing on the domestic
sector alone - Many industries use outdated processes and pay
little regard for water recycling within the
organization. - Industries may have developed private supplies
and enjoy unlimited abstraction but it may be
from the same source as the public supply,
contributing to resource depletion. - In most cases, water conservation within industry
will result in savings in operation cost which
may be the best encouragement for conservation.
44LOW INCOME COMMUNITIES
- Number of WDM instruments may not be applicable
for LIC such as retrofitting or out-of-house
water saving measures - Some may have unintended side effects such as the
increasing block tariff systems and metering - Prevent conservation-oriented measures from
reducing consumption in households that do not
consume sufficient water to meet their basic
needs for health - But some important instruments that apply to
these areas, such as leakage detection, reduction
of illegal connections and awareness, require an
attitude within these communities that can only
be expected if they feel co-ownership over that
water. - Demand responsive approaches and community
management of water supply systems can bring
about this attitude.
45LOW INCOME COMMUNITIES
- Demand-side management in low income cities
should not only focus on water conservation but
should also give attention to two issues
securing better access to water for the urban
poor and promoting hygiene. - Demand-side management recognizes that improved
health is one of the major benefits water can
provide, but that the health outcome depends upon
how the water is used.
46DAILY PER CAPITA WATER USE (EAST AFRICA)
Thompson et al. (2001)
47PUBLIC AWARENESS
- Awareness campaigns to reduce water use amongst
all consumers can play an important role in
demand management. - Such campaigns need to focus on the urgency of
conserving water now to hopefully avert a crisis
sometime in the future. - Improved awareness should be tackled at all
levels incl. a role for communities and
grassroots organizations. - The use of mass media is cost effective in most
cities as even the urban poor have access to such
communication tools - Religious and cultural preferences must also be
followed particularly where local community
actions related to integrated management of
services. i.e. use of sanitation facilities for
washing/personal hygiene.
48PARTICPATORY APPROACHES
- It has for long been assumed that communities do
not know their infrastructure needs - especially
low-income communities. - Thus decisions have been made on assumptions by
engineers and planners and not on actual
information and understanding of household water
demand. - Recognized that this top-down approach has been
the reason for the failure of many initiatives. - Technologies can never change people's attitude
and will only be applied effectively if people
are motivated to do so. - Communities have to be involved in the decision
making process on the water supply system based
on their demands. - The participatory methodologies must be applied
to motivate people to adopt Water Demand
Management instruments.
49MANAGING WATER FOR AFRICAN CITIES (1999)
- The Programme works with city and local
authorities, national governments, the private
sector, civil society .. - To benefit of all African cities -demonstrated in
7 cities Abidjan (Cote d'Ivoire), Accra (Ghana),
Addis Ababa (Ethiopia), Dakar (Senegal),
Johannesburg (South Africa), Lusaka (Zambia) and
Nairobi (Kenya). - Objectives To tackle the urban water crisis in
African cities through efficient and effective
WDM . and boost awareness and information
exchange on water management and conservation. - Targeted beneficiaries policy makers on water
and the environment, city managers of water
utilities, water consumers, children for water
education . - All projects include public awareness and
information campaigns - Experiences made available to the other
participating cities.
50ADDIS ABABA
51ADDIS ABABA
- One of the fastest growing cities in Africa, with
an estimated population of 2.7 million
inhabitants (4th largest city in Africa by 2015).
- Tackling leak detection as a priority
Unaccounted for water (UFW) in the network
amounts to approximately 40. This leads to a
loss of approximately US 10 million per year. - Developing a detailed water demand management
(WDM) strategy for Addis Ababa resulting in a
dedicated WDM unit. - Demonstration projects to build capacity on how
to manage and run a dedicated WDM unit, GIS for
distribution system management and enhancing
effectiveness of leak detection programmes. - In addition the project provides a framework for
coordinating and harmonising large scale supply
projects, by promoting the incorporation of WDM
components.
52DAKAR
53DAKAR
- Urgent need to increase medium term storage
production and distribution of Dakar, which
required large-scale investment. - Need to increase the bulk supply to the city but
by implementing WDM it could delay the need for
this project (reducing debt payments). - Retrofitting of faucets, showerheads and toilet
flushing will be implemented in public buildings
and/or the university using modern imported
fittings with a view of manufacturing locally. - Apartment blocks will be included where one bulk
meters are installed where residents usually pay
for water at a flat rate. - The project will evaluate the use of treated
wastewater for aquifer recharge and irrigation of
public parks and other facilities.
54ABIDJAN
55ABIDJAN
- Water resources are not currently limited in the
city, demands will gradually reach levels where
groundwater may be insufficient. - There is a need to develop a demand management
strategy now to ensure that all actors use water
efficiently. - The amount of water currently used by industry is
excessive and there is currently no incentive to
reduce usage. - Also vast amounts of water are lost through poor
management, particularly in public buildings,
schools universities. - Large proportion of Abidjan's urban poor is
without efficient services. There is however an
ability to pay and many of the poor already pay
high prices to unsolicited water vendors etc. - Demonstration project in selected areas where
consumption can be reduced with relatively little
capital investment in retro-fitting technologies
or the use of appropriate economic instruments.
56MANAGING WATER IN ASIAN CITIES (March 2003)
- Draws upon lessons learned in our successful
Water for African Cities program and help ensure
that pro-poor, sustainable water policies are
implemented, - Aims to build the capacity of Asian cities to
help the region meet the Millennium Development
Goal (MDG) of "halving, by 2015, the proportion
of people without safe drinking water and basic
sanitation.
57SUMMARY
- Water crisis is a reality in most cities in LDCs
- Proactive WDM enables the effective, efficient
and equitable use of limited water - A combination of WDM instruments must be used to
maximise the potential benefits - An objective of WDM must be to improve the equity
of the distribution of limited water - A participatory approach is essential for
affective WDM as successful implementation
requires attitude changes
58THANK YOU
59SELECTED REFRENCES
- Deverill, P, Bibby, S, Wedgwood, A and Smout, I.
(2002) Designing water supply and sanitation
projects to meet demand in rural and peri-urban
communities, Book 1 Concept, Principles and
Practice, WEDC 2002. - Frederick, K.D (1993) Balancing Water Demands
with Supplies- The role of management in a world
of increasing scarcity, World Bank Technical
Paper No 189,1993 - Fredricksen, H.D (1992) Drought Planning and
Water efficiency Implications in Water resources
Management, World Bank Technical Paper No
185,1992 - GWP (2003) Toolbox, Version 2 - Integrating
water resources management Global Water
Partnership 2003 - Rosegrant, M.W, Cai, X and Cline, S.A (2002)
Averting an Impending Crisis Food policy
report-Global water outlook to 2025 IWMI 2002. - UNCHS (1999) Managing Water for African Cities
Developing a Strategy for Urban Water Demand
Management, Expert Group Meeting Cape Town,
South Africa 26-18 April 1999, United Nations
Centre for Human Settlements (Habitat)UNCHS
(2003) Managing Water for African Cities
www.un-urbanwater.net - UNESCO (2003) Water for people water for life
United Nations World Water Development Report,
UNESCO-WWAP 2003 - WHO, UNICEF and WSSCC (2000) Global water supply
and sanitation assessment - 2000 Report , WHO
2000 Xie, M, Kufferner, U and Le Moigne, G.
(1993) Using Water efficiently - Technological
Option, World Bank Technical Paper No 205,1993