Category Archives: Urban WASH

Higher water tariffs are associated with lower water loss

“Our Smart Water Networks Forum is aiming to help water utilities do the right thing: investing in operation and maintenance and sustainability of their data-driven smart water networks and not only focusing on pipe and pumps”, Smart Water Networks Forum Chairman Guy Horowitz told IRC’s Dick de Jong at the 2011 Aquatech Amsterdam SWAN session on 1 November 2011. Inefficient water distribution and poor water efficiency are the culprits.

Mr. Horowitz is Vice President Marketing of TaKaDu, a water infrastructure monitoring software pioneer based in Israel shared recent research findings that show the connection between water prices and water loss rates. Based on information from 42 urban water networks all over the world, their research found that higher water tariffs are associated with lower water loss and a more sustainable outcome. In most cities where the price of water is very high or very low, low and high NRW (non revenue water) rates are observed respectively.

This holds true across different countries and regions and even cities. Manila East and Manila West for instance have two different private sector operators. Manila West scores 12 percent non revenue water, Manila East scores 53 percent water losses.

Thus, when setting policy and water tariffs, policy makers should consider all possible implications of low pricing to avoid infrastructure deterioration. Regulatory tools such as on-going benchmarking of water utilities and incentives for improved performance can be used, as well as a tiered pricing model for domestic consumption, TaKaDu concludes.

Related web sites:

Related news: Dick de Jong, The SWAN Forum: Defining the future of Smart Water Networks, WASH News International, 02 Nov 2011

The SWAN Forum: Defining the future of Smart Water Networks

The Smart Water Networks Forum started in May 2011 as a worldwide industry forum promoting the use of data technologies in water networks, making them smarter, more efficient and more sustainable.  Smart water networks are leveraging data and information technology for an improved, streamlined and more efficient operation of water utilities. With the increased instrumentation and telemetry of water networks, especially of distribution systems, a new layer of smart data applications has become possible.  They include alert systems, smart flow pressure management, water infrastructure monitoring and water balance and leak detection software and many others.

Smart Water Network (SWAN) solutions improve the efficiency, longevity, and reliability of the underlying physical water network by better measuring, collecting, analyzing, and acting upon a wide range of events. SWAN brings water industry leaders together to promote awareness, effectiveness, and use of smart data systems for water networks.

The SWAN forum encourages targeted, technical discussion to:

  • Raise awareness for smart water networks.
  • Create and report upon the methodologies, standard performance indicators, and industry best practices.
  • Develop new approaches and solutions to improve network operations.
  • Share members’ experience, case studies and research.
  • Promote interoperability, synergy and common measurements.

Membership fees range from Euro 950 for individuals (students free) to Euro 4,900 for platinum members.

www.swan-forum.com

contact: Email: swanforum@live.co.uk

Slum dwellers should be a priority for water and sanitation investment, WaterAid manifesto

Investment in water and sanitation in the rapidly urbanising cities of the developing world is key if we are to avoid uncontrollable poverty and ever worsening slums, says WaterAid in a manifesto released on 3 October 2011.

The manifesto’s author Timeyin Uwejamomere of WaterAid said:

“Water and sanitation have proved time and time again to be a critical factor in health and economic development. We only need to look at the development of the ‘Asian Tigers’ to see that long-term, reliable funding into urban water and sanitation infrastructure has a powerful impact on economic productivity, as well as driving down poverty.”

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“Act now to end the sanitation and water crisis in the Least Developed Countries”

“Act now to end the sanitation and water crisis in the Least Developed  Countries”. With this message the End Water Poverty campaign coalition is asking its members to lobby for this with their national governments that go to the Fourth UN Conference on the Least Developed Countries (LDC-IV) in Istanbul from 9 to 13 May May 2011.

They coalition is offering a civil society manifesto PDF file with recommendations for the Istanbul Programme for Action document, which will be adopted at the conference. The draft document sets the ambitious target of ensuring all LDCs get access to water and sanitation by 2020, but the coalition feels that clear steps outlining how this target will be realised must be set out in the Istanbul document to ensure accountability and a real chance of success.

Tangible actions that should be highlighted are:

  • Strengthening national water and sanitation plans by integrating them with health, education and urban planning
  • Investment in low income countries and marginalized groups
  • Support of the Sanitation and Water for All partnership
  • Championing the cause of the urban poor to satisfy the growing needs of all in towns and cities.

Source: Fleur Anderson, International Campaign Coordinator, End Water Poverty, 12 Apr 2011

World Bank launches Global Urbanization Knowledge Platform

In 2011, the World Bank’s Knowledge Council selected urbanisation as one of the Knowledge Platforms eligible for three year seed funding by the Bank. The Global Urbanization Knowledge Platform is a collaborative partnership between researchers, policymakers, the private-sector, and knowledge brokers including the World Bank Group. It aims to become the leading “go-to” hub for urban knowledge.

This means moving beyond a static repository, and beyond conferences and workshops, towards an open-source knowledge exchange

Topics are demand-driven, requested by participants, within four thematic pillars: economic, social, environmental and governance.

Four platform components are envisaged:

  • an open, online forum
  • rolling, dynamic knowledge exchanges in real-time; this involves voting on topics (new urban policies, research or problems) during rapid fire showcases to be further discussed and summarised for dissemination online
  • ‘thought-leaders’
  • a data platform

Global Urbanization Knowledge Platform structure

Partners that have already signed on to the Global Urbanization Knowledge Platform include the World Bank, McKinsey Global Institute, Cities Alliance, : Indian Institute for Human Settlements, MIT Dept of Urban Studies & Planning, Brookings Institution and eminent researchers like Edward Glaeser and Vernon Henderson.

One of the first thought-leader presentations is Glaeser’s Triumph of the City

The official launch of the platform will take place during six or more events on June 2011. The aim is to be fully operational from July 2011 onwards.

Read the Global Urbanization Knowledge Platform leaflet

Source: World Bank, Urban Development Issue Brief, Apr 2011 ; Making Cities Work, 11 Feb 2011

Water data visualization challenge offers US$ 5,000 cash prize to winner

Visualizing.org and Circle of Blue have launched an international contest, which offers a US$ 5,000 cash prize to creative teams of designers, data experts and visualizers who present new ways to visualise data on urban water and sanitation.

The competition closes on 18 March and winners will be announced on World Water Day, 22 March 2011.

Read more at: www.circleofblue.org/waternews/visualizing/

Urban catastrophes: the Wat/San dimension

A lack of clean water and sanitation in burgeoning slums could trigger a complex set of humanitarian crises says a new [forthcoming] paper, Urban Catastrophes: The Wat/San Dimension [1], by the Humanitarian Futures Programme (HFP) of King’s College London, which keeps an eye on possible crises that could emerge in the not too distant future.

Using plausible but fictitious scenarios set in the slums of Dhaka, capital of Bangladesh, and the city of Sao Paulo, Brazil, the paper shows how water scarcity brought on by climate change and large numbers of people in urban areas could lead to water stress, especially in slums, where shortages can stoke conflicts and an outbreak of a new and virulent influenza.

Simultaneously, the new biennial report by UN-HABITAT, the State of the World Cities 2010/2011: Bridging the Urban Divide, notes that around 3.49 billion people – more than half the world’s population – now live in urban areas, of which 827.6 million are slum-dwellers. The global slum population will probably grow by six million each year, pushing the total number to 889 million in another 10 years.

Urbanization can also provoke water-quality problems, leading to outbreaks of waterborne diseases like cholera. An outbreak that began in the slums of Luanda, the Angolan capital, killed over 2,800 people in 2006, when only 66 percent of Angola’s urban population has access to safe drinking water, according to the UN.

Water shortages in slums could open the door to corruption, conflict and an increased risk of disease, setting off a range of complex humanitarian crises. Many of these factors are already evident and operating in slums across the world, the authors of the HFP report note.

Corruption

“As with any valuable good, the provision of clean water and sanitation facilities in slums is an attractive target for corruption, greed, collusion and exploitation,” the HFP researchers pointed out.

In areas where there is a lack of accountability and political oversight, “resulting in collusion between government officials and private-sector water providers”, slum dwellers have to pay a very high price for water, and sanitation falls by the wayside.

The result is that the civil society is weakened and ability of slum dwellers and external players to change the system and help the residents out of poverty is curtailed, the HFP report commented.

Conflict

There is also evidence that water shortages threaten increased violence and conflict, especially in “high-density, multi-ethnic, politically unequal environments of concentrated poverty, as is often found in many slums,” the HFP report said, citing reports of water-related protests and conflicts in Bolivia, Pakistan and India.

Risk of disease

As larger numbers of people move into already crowded areas, they are often forced to live in unacceptably poor sanitary conditions, sometimes even at close quarters with animals, giving rise to opportunities for new disease vectors, noted the report. In slums located in tropical climates, the chances of new forms of diseases evolving are high.

What to do

Randolph Kent, who heads HFP, pointed out that the projections were for 20 to 30 years in the future, “but the idea is to provide enough time to countries to plan ahead”.

He suggested setting up low-tech, cheap service delivery systems – for instance, to provide water, use segmented flexible rubber hoses that can be easily connected and disconnected. The hoses are produced by several independent companies, can be serviced and maintained by unskilled technicians, and offer plenty of design options.

For waste removal, the report suggested an improvement on the traditional chamber pot – use antibacterial plastic buckets that can be fitted with mechanically sealing covers, as on commercial compost bins. The bucket can be carried either by hand or taken by cart to a dumping point like a municipal sewer, then cleaned by hand or at a semi-automatic hot water and bleach station, and delivered to the family for re-use.

[1] The “Urban Catastrophes: The WatSan dimension” report is one of three outputs of a USAID-funded study of key future crisis drivers. The reports will shortly be made public on the HFP website.

Source: IRIN, 23 Mar 2010

World Bank Water Week 2009 presentations online

Water Week took place at the World Bank headquarters in Washington DC from February 17-20, 2009. The event was organized by the Water Anchor in partnership with the Water Sector Board. Titled “Tackling Global Water Challenges”, the discussions focused on the urgent challenges currently faced by the water community including inter alia: adapting to climate change, responding to the food crisis, keeping the momentum for the MDGs, and dealing with the potential impact of the global economic crisis.

All presentations are now online here [for previous years see the World Bank Water Weeks presentation guide 2001-2007].

Below are links to some of the WASH-related presentations:

Africa

Asia

Latin America

General – Hygiene and Sanitation

General – Urban WASH

Miscellaneous

Water Week 2009: Tackling Global Water Challenges, 17-20 Feb 2009, Washington, DC, USA

Water Week is an annual event organised by the World Bank’s Water Anchor and Water Sector Board. This year’s theme is “Tackling Global Water Challenges”, and the discussions will focus on the urgent challenges currently faced by the water community including: adapting to climate change, responding to the food crisis, keeping the momentum for the MDGs, and dealing with the potential impact of the global economic crisis.

Attendance to the Water Week 2009 is by invitation only for external participants.

Read the programme here

The Water Week Event Guide contains links to hundreds of presentations by water experts and practitioners made between 2001-2007.

For more information go to the World Bank site

1st IWA Development Congress, 6-9 Sep 2009, Mexico City, Mexico

Organised by the International Water Association (IWA), this event will bring together 1,000 international water and sanitation professionals to discuss emerging solutions, developments and approaches to sustainable water and sanitation management and exchange knowledge on all aspects of service delivery in low and middle income countries.

In addition to many international subjects and issues related to water and sanitation delivery, this congress will pay particular attention to the needs of the Latin American region, its megacities, urban centres and peri-urban areas.

The main tracks and topics for platform and paper presentations of scientific and technical papers are as follows:

Challenges to service delivery

  • Mega cities, rapid urbanization and water delivery
  • Inadequacies of conventional approaches to water and sanitation
  • Protecting groundwater as a sustainable resource

Innovation and change

  • Technical options and boundaries for application
  • Capacity building and peer learning – water operator partnerships
  • New research and technology development
  • Applying local knowledge to providing water and sanitation

Implementation and delivery

  • Operating at large scale – learning from process and experience
  • Developing appropriate and scaleable regulatory approaches
  • Policy, norms and standards and their implications for service delivery

Abstract deadline: 01 Jan 2009

For more information go to the Conference web site