Title: Water Safety Plans at small-scale and community level
1Water Safety Plans at small-scale and community
level
- Prof Richard Carter (WaterAid) and Dr Jen Smith
(Cranfield University)
2Overview
- The need for Water Safety Plans
- WHO / IWA WSP steps
- WSP in small-scale / community managed systems
- Liberia (no WSP) community handpump
- Nigeria (no WSP) urban dug wells
- Bangladesh findings from WSP pilot project
- WSP critique
- The future Water Security Plans?
3The need for Water Safety Plans
4WSP steps
5WSP in context
Literacy
Motivation
Health targets
WASH education
Community Small-scale
MANAGEMENT
6Liberia community handpumps
- Functioning water committee
- Active community health volunteers
- Best practice followed
Review amend current practice
7Nigeria urban self supply
- Variable well conditions
- 1 owner, many users
- Limited space (toilet well)
- Poor health understanding
- Little governmental support
- Reactive culture
New thinking
8Bangladesh WSP pilot study
- Improved microbial quality
- at tap
- in home
- Not 0 CFU/100ml
- Significant consistent reductions in sanitary
risks - Simple monitoring tool (pictorial)
- On-going surveillance
- Further capacity building (local regional)
APSU, 2006
Success
9WSP for small self-supply and community-managed
systems
- What do users care about in terms of water?
- Importance of external support
- Buy-in from all parties
- How do you regulate / monitor / verify?
- Template use links with complacency?
- Success of localised revisions
- Culture recording data / proactive approach
10Beyond water safety plans (1)
- Water consumers want
- ready access
- adequate quantity
- adequate quality
- acceptable reliability
- at a price they can afford
- without an unrealistic management burden
11Beyond water safety plans (2)
- Why consumers want
- ready access convenience, time and energy saving
- adequate quantity for domestic and productive
uses - adequate quality for aesthetic reasons, health
- acceptable reliability convenience and time
saving - at a price they can afford poverty, valuation of
water - without an unrealistic management burden
convenience
12Outcomes and impacts of improved water supply
Outcomes Increased consumption of adequate
quality water from a reliable, affordable and
manageable system - in other words, functioning
and utilisation (WHO MEP) of a sustainable
service (WaterAid, Triple-S and others). Impacts
Time and energy saving leading to
socio-economic impacts.Enhanced quantity and
quality leading to (small) health impacts.
13Beyond water safety plans (3)
Not only water quality (safety) for health ...
but a fully functioning water supply service in
order to achieve the wider outcomes and impacts
which consumers want.
... towards water security
14Water security has environmental and management
dimensions
- Environmental aspects quality and quantity of
water resources, pressures, trends - Management aspects financing and institutional
arrangements to ensure functional sustainability
15Towards water security plans
with the practicality of water safety plans
Combining the principles of integrated water
resource management
Practical Simple Risk-based Achievable -
Limited focus
- High-level - Poorly defined - Hard to
implement Common sense Integrated
Moving towards a risk-based approach for ensuring
sustainable water supply services
16Thank you
- j.a.smith_at_cranfield.ac.uk
- richardcarter_at_wateraid.org