Leave a comment

Akvopedia WASH Finance Portal launched by Akvo and IRC

Finance-portal

A new free and open source knowledge portal has been launched by Akvo and IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre. It is designed to help water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) teams achieve sustainable financing throughout the entire life-cycle of WASH services.

What WASH costs do I need to finance? How can I finance WASH services and how can I monitor the financing of these services? These are the questions that the new WASH Finance Portal attempts to answer at: akvo.org/wiki/index.php/Finance_Portal

Continue Reading »

13 Comments

Dear Matt Damon,

This blog is a response to the video posted by Matt Damon, co-founder of water.org, where he announces a toilet strike to raise awareness for the water crisis.

——-

Dear Matt,

I enjoyed your video on water.org about going on a toilet strike. It is great that you are so passionate about realizing access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene for all. I personally also like it that you bring in some humor into our sometimes very boring sector.

In your video you mention that it costs $25 USD to provide a person with sanitation for life. This is not true. Over the past four years IRC’s WASHCost project in Burkina Faso, Ghana, Andhra Pradesh (India) and Mozambique has collected, validated and analysed cost and service level information for water, sanitation and hygiene. Based on this research we know that for $ 25 USD you can construct a traditional pit latrine with an impermeable slab which provides a basic service. In order to sustain the service provided by that traditional pit latrine it costs between $ 1.5 and $ 4 USD per person per year – so to provide sanitation for life means finding that 1.5-4USD every year …. for life. If you do not know how, or by who, these recurrent costs will be financed, it is very likely that the latrine you are constructing today will break down or not used within two to three years, wasting your investment.

If you would like to know more about how you can better plan, budget and monitor for sustainable services, join our free online Costing Sustainable Services course. In this online course you can  discuss with IRC staff and meet 600 water sector professionals from around the world interested in planning and budgeting for sustainable and equitable water, sanitation and hygiene services, using a life-cycle cost approach. The course is accessible 24 hours per day and you can follow it at your own pace so it is easy to combine with your other work.

Of course nothing beats a face-face exchanging of ideas, so you are always welcome to visit us at our office in The Hague, The Netherlands, or participate in one of our workshops on costing sustainable services. The next workshop is in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Friday 12 April connected to the Monitoring Sustainable WASH Service Delivery Symposium.

Hope to hear from you soon,

Kind regards,

Jeske Verhoeven

Programme Officer

IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre

Leave a comment

We can no more expect unmaintained pumps to provide services than we can a car with no fuel to take us on our journey

What does it cost to provide water services that last? What do we mean by a water service? How can we measure whether water is being provided effectively, and at the desired level? These were among the questions tackled during a panel discussion held in WASH Advocate’s 301 session for World Water Day.

Catarina Fonseca and Patrick Moriarty of IRC were joined by panelists and some 120 participants to discuss the implications for rural WASH services of the most recent findings from IRC’s WASHCost project.

After introducing and explaining the main building blocks of WASHCost’s life-cycle costs approach, Catarina Fonseca, WASHCost project director, presented a summary of WASHCost’s recent findings, including:

  • Up to 40% of investments in the rural WASH sector end up in the garbage bin due to poor maintenance and upkeep; resulting in ‘slippage’ where previously served communities or individuals regress to a lower level of service—or to none at all.
  • Providing effective post-construction support for rural water services – one critical element in fighting slippage – costs at least US$ 2-3 per person served every year. Yet WASHCost findings suggest that many countries, especially in Africa, typically spend less than US$ 1 per person.

According to one audience member, ‘investments in WASH services that only address the need for new infrastructure are like giving someone a car to solve their transport problems, but then never spending any money on fuel or servicing. We can no more expect unmaintained pumps to provide services than we can a car with no fuel to take us on our journey.’

Panellist Christophe Prevost of the World Bank suggested that ‘while getting much right in our efforts in rural WASH over the last two decades, we need to accept that our failure to grapple with the challenge of sustainability is a major failing . However some countries are doing much better than others and there are solutions to improve sustainability in particular when sector allocation for post construction is properly considered”’. Catarina Fonseca proposed that best practice for all projects in the sector should include providing a percentage of investment to upgrade or rehabilitate existing systems before creating new ones.

Patrick Moriarty added that one possible solution to the problem of poor and unsustainable services would be to shift aid to the WASH sector towards outcome based payment for actual service delivered. In response to Moriarty’s suggestion and the challenge of engaging local political support, panelist Louis Boorstin of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation suggested that a combination of outcome-based payment, amplifying consumer voice, and defining the problem correctly using WASHCost’s focus on sustainable service delivery might just yield breakthroughs in the future.

Third panelist, Tanvi Nagpal of Johns Hopkins University said that one of many real challenges is providing sufficient incentives, along with WASHCost information, for decision makers at the district level so that they use WASHCost data when making investment choices. She also shared her experiences of teaching the different aspects of life-cycle costs to her class. Nagpal indicated that for many of her students from the MA International relations programme, it was the first time that they had given thought to more than basic capital, and small operation and maintenance costs.

The panel discussion was part of WASH Advocate’s 301 session for World Water Day—hosted by the World Bank on 21th March 2012 in Washington, D.C.

Patrick Moriarty

Leave a comment

Briefing Note on budget tracking approaches in the WASH sector: methods, applicability and examples

The Dutch WASH Alliance (DWA) works towards a society in which everybody has access to sustainable water and sanitation. DWA acknowledges that sustainable WASH has at least five dimensions: financial, institutional, environmental, technical and a social (FIETS) dimension, which are adopted in DWA programmes as part of its FIETS sustainability principles.

The DWA asserts that employing a “budget tracking” approach is a possible way forward towards accomplishing the objectives of two leading FIETS principles: financial sustainability and institutional sustainability. In this note, budget tracking approaches and methods, and its applicability within the WASH sector are discussed to offer insight into how and whether it can be applied within the DWA programme.

This Briefing note was written by Ružica Jaćimović (FlowNet) and Catarina Fonseca (IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre). It was presented by Peter Bury and Russell Kerkhoven (IRC), and discussed with DWA members during the Workshop: Finance for WASH – Learning from Practice, held in Leiden, The Netherlands, February 2012.

Download the briefing note here: DWA-LL_budget_tracking_note.pdf (190.1 kB)

Leave a comment

The cost of handpump water supply services in the Sahel

Triple-S-RPF-1-PezonA new IRC- Triple-S/GLOWS/WA-WASH research paper analyses the absolute and relative value of each cost component of a water service (capital investment, operating costs, rehabilitation cost, support costs) and looks into each component cost drivers.

The effective expenditures on 842 handpumps composing 192 rural water services are compared to the national guidelines available in Burkina Faso. Two gaps are identified: post-construction expenditures don’t match with national guidelines (operating costs and rehabilitation being 50% and 150% higher than planned) and the highest recurrent cost, direct support, is missing as a cost category in national guidelines.

The under- estimation of recurrent expenditure undermines the assumptions made in the sector in Burkina Faso on the appropriate scale to manage water services that last.

Functionality of handumps is decreasing because the high maintenance of handpumps is financially unviable at village scale as established by the regulations. Whatever age, type of pump, management model and location, a handump requires higher capital maintenance than expected, that is one intervention every 3 years, each costing an average of FCFA 150,000 or US$300 which equals 2 years of the service provider theoretical turnover per handpump.

A change in the scale of high maintenance financing could improve serviceability of handpumps with unchanged water tariff.

The paper is in French and includes an executive summary in English.

Pezon, C. and Bassono, R., 2013. Le coût de l’approvisionnement en eau par PMH au Sahel. The Hague, The Netherlands, IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre. Available at: http://washurl.net/c04x8b

Leave a comment

WASHfunders.org

This portal was launched in October 2011 by the US Foundation Center as a collaborative platform for philanthropic foundations that fund water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) projects around the world.

The centre piece is an interactive map showing which foundation funds what where.  Currently projects from hundreds of foundations such as the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Conrad N. Hilton Foundation, Howard G. Buffett Foundation and Skoll Foundation, are included. There are country profiles listing foundation grants, WASH indicators and historical OECD bilateral and multilateral grant data.

Besides the interactive map, the portal provides news and resources for grantmakers such as case studies, recommended reading and overview of key organisations and monitoring tools.

Websitewashfunders.org

Leave a comment

Liberia: extra US$ 450 million needed to rebuild water and sanitation sector

Reblogged from WASH news Africa:

Liberia will need to bridge a US$ 450 million funding gap to achieve the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) targets that it set for itself in 2017.

Liberia unveiled a five-year US$ 600 million investment plan to rebuild its WASH sector on 7 February 2013. The sector is still recovering from decades of civil war. However, only US$ 150 million of the required amount is covered by existing support from development partners.

Read more… 313 more words

Leave a comment

Towards sustainable water services in La Paz, Bolivia

Reblogged from WASH news Latin America and Caribbean:

Click to visit the original post
  • Click to visit the original post

A Dutch-funded project aims to bring piped drinking water to peri-urban neighbourhoods of the Bolivian capital La Paz. What will determine its success? Is it the inhabitants’ willingness and ability to pay for improved water services? No, the biggest threat to the sustainability of the project is the lack of a national sector strategy that clearly outlines how to finance the full costs of service delivery.

Read more… 432 more words

Leave a comment

Costing rural water service levels in Burkina Faso

WASHCost-WP5F-coverBased on national standards, the 7 boreholes and 3 standpipes in the village of Komsilga, Burkina Faso, are sufficient to supply water to 3,600 people. Since only 1,500 people live in the village, you might think that they had water in abundance.

In reality, only half of the villagers receive a basic level of service and half a limited if any service at all. The provision of a basic water service by a small network costs 9 times more in investment and 54 times more in operation and maintenance than a similar level of service provided by a handpump.

These are some of the findings in a new working paper by Dr Christelle Pezon from IRC’s WASHCost project, which describes the analytical framework and the methodological tools developed to cost rural water service levels.

Pezon, C., 2012. Evaluer le coût d’un service pérenne d’eau potable au Burkina Faso: méthodes et outils. (WASHCost document de travail ; n°5). The Hague, The Netherlands, IRC International Water and Sanitation Centre. Available at: www.washcost.info/page/2663

For more on WASHCost Burkina Faso see: www.washcost.info/page/475

Visit the WASHCost campaign page: campaign.washcost.info

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 25 other followers