Towards Sustainable Water-Supply Solutions in Rural Sierra Leone: A Pragmatic Approach, Using Comparisons With Mozambique
Towards Sustainable Water-Supply Solutions in Rural Sierra Leone: A Pragmatic Approach, Using Comparisons With Mozambique
Towards Sustainable Water-Supply Solutions in Rural Sierra Leone: A Pragmatic Approach, Using Comparisons With Mozambique
OXFAM
RESEARCH
REPORT
Solutions in Rural Sierra Leone
A Pragmatic Approach, Using Comparisons with
Mozambique
John Magrath
(Programme Researcher, Oxfam GB)
Conclusions 21
Recommendations 22
Acknowledgements 25
Executive summary
Despite making considerable progress since the end of the civil war in 2002, Sierra Leone
is a long way from being able to meet the needs of its citizens for safe water, still less
attain the Millennium Development Goal of halving the proportion of people without
access to safe water by the year 2015.
To protect the population from water-borne diseases, the government of Sierra Leone has
established firm guidelines to prescribe the types of hand pump that may be used. To
improve sustainability, the government says that communities should pay the full cost of
operating and maintaining their own water supplies.
Oxfam is concerned that these guidelines may be having, or may in future lead to, almost
the opposite effect: of constraining peoples ability to obtain regular access to safe water.
Unless the technology matches the communities capacity to maintain their water points,
then officially prescribed systems will not be sustainable.
Oxfam research in Kailahun District in February 2006 set out to investigate this
hypothesis and potential options for extending access to safe water. This report also uses
research by WaterAid to compare the situation in Sierra Leone with that in Mozambique.
It ends with recommendations for consideration by the government of Sierra Leone.
The report shows that hand pumps supply the safest drinking water and are the water-
lifting device that most people prefer. Most pumps are working, but then most have been
installed only recently. However, the report questions over-reliance on Kardias and the
other pumps specified by government, and it also expresses some concern about
excessive reliance on hand-pumps generally. It raises questions about the capacity of
communities to maintain them. Obstacles are both social poverty, lack of community
cohesion, womens workload and position in society and technical including lack of
tools and spares, and the need for extensive training of caretakers and mechanics. The
survey found that people were not informed about the likely long-term financial cost of
hand pumps when they were being installed, which made properly informed choice
impossible.
When pumps break down, the difficulties of doing repairs mean that people have to go
back to less-safe sources. But communities anyway cannot meet all their water needs
from improved sources, especially in the dry season. They continue to resort to
traditional wells, springs, and streams on a regular basis. The research showed that
traditional wells were particularly prone to bacteriological contamination. Given that
people will continue to have to use these wells anyway, it is important to find ways to
improve water quality.
Most traditional wells are privately owned, and owners continue to invest in them. (In
contrast to the problems involved in raising funds for the maintenance of collectively
owned supplies.) The report suggests that finding ways to do low-cost upgrading of
traditional wells could lead to significant improvements in access to safe water.
Furthermore, no matter what the water source, whether it be lined wells supplied with
hand pumps, or traditional wells, or spring boxes, water becomes rapidly contaminated
once it enters peoples homes. This fact demonstrates the urgent need for more integrated
public health and hygiene interventions alongside all or any water-supply
improvements.
Regular refresher training of mechanics is also needed. Such training should particularly
focus on women, who are the principal users of water and less likely than men to move
away from the community. But it needs to be recognised that this added responsibility
would add to womens workload, which is already heavy.
1
A Review of the Water Supply and Sanitation Sector, by E.T. Ndomahina and I.S. Kabia for
Government of Sierra Leone, Poverty Alleviation Strategy Coordinating Office (PASCO), July
2004.
2
Figures from various sources: meeting of DACO / SLIS DEPAC (Development Assistance Co-
ordination Office / Sierra Leone Information System Development Partnership Committee), January
2004, on the Water Supply and Sanitation Sector, Sierra Leone; UNDP Human Development
Report 2004; Sally Sutton, Self Supply in Sierra Leone, report for the Rural Water Supply Network
(RWSN), April 2005; Mapping of Sierra Leones Water Resources and its Management
Framework, draft report, November 2005, by Francis Moijue for ECOWAS Water Resources
Coordination Unit; and the Economist Intelligence Unit country profile, 2005.
3
S. Sutton, Preliminary Desk Study of Potential for Self-Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa, WaterAid,
October 2004.
4
L2,9003,000 to the US$.
5
Tearfund: Making Every Drop Count: Financing Water, Sanitation and Hygiene in Sierra Leone,
2005; and DACO / SLIS DEPAC, op.cit.
6
Dying for the Toilet, WaterAid 2004.
7
Government of the Republic of Sierra Leone, Millennium Development Goals Report, 2005.
8
SALWACO are currently responsible for five provincial urban water systems.
9
WSD are responsible for the rest of the countrys urban water systems, rural water policy and
regulation.
Decentralisation
Another potentially very important policy that the government is introducing is that of
decentralisation of responsibility for infrastructure and services. Responsibility for
building and maintaining rural water supplies is supposed to pass to the new district
councils (elected in 2004) later in 2006, following decentralisation of responsibility for
agriculture, education, and health and sanitation in 2005. The councils have authority to
impose taxes to finance district development plans and the delivery of basic services.
Although the details remain to be worked out, it is expected that SALWACO / WSD will
appoint water and sanitation technicians in each district. Decentralisation has the
potential to move control of basic services closer to citizens.
An important opportunity
This is therefore an important opportunity to put the best policies in place from the start.
Oxfam GB (referred to hereafter as Oxfam) is concerned that the guidelines currently in
place, while clearly intended to protect the population from water-borne diseases, may
be having, or may in the future lead to, almost the opposite effect: of constraining the
ability of people to obtain regular supplies of safe water. This report summarises the
findings of an Oxfam survey in Kailahun which illustrates these concerns. The experience
of WaterAid in Mozambique is also particularly pertinent in this regard.
10
Sierra Leone Government, 2003 figure cited in Draft National Policy Guidelines, January 2005;
and DACO / SLIS DEPAC.
11
SPHERE standards prescribe one water point per 250 people in normal circumstances, and an
upper limit of 1:500 in emergencies.
12
Kailahun Water and Sanitation Survey Report, National Recovery Committee, February 2004;
Sierra Leone Government national census, 2004.
13
Similar studies have been conducted by other agencies e.g. Action Contre la Faim (ACF) in
Gbonkolenken and Tane Chiefdoms, Tonkolili District; by GOAL in Kenema District; and by COOPI
in Koidu town, eastern Sierra Leone.
14
See for example, Lessons Learned from Village Level Operation and Maintenance (VLOM) by
Jeremy Colin, Report Summary of WELL (DFID) Task Force No. 162, March 1999 (WELL: Water
and Environmental Health at London and Loughborough Resource Centre Network for Water,
Sanitation and Environmental Health).
15
The most perishable components of the Kardia are the sealing cups and O-rings. Sealing cups
cost L25,900 ($US 8.50), and O-rings L2,275 ($US<1). Grease, essential for preventative
maintenance, costs L24,150 ($US 8) per 400g. Note that these are Freetown prices; costs can be
expected to be higher outside the capital, especially in remote communities (source: Associate
Investment Enterprise, Freetown, price list 21/09/05).
In case of breakdowns, 50 per cent of interviewees said they would take action in the
community to try to solve the problem themselves working with others, or with the
committee, speaking to the Chief, or contacting the mechanic. People usually said that
they would go to the Chief. However, when asked, Chiefs and mechanics usually said
that they would in turn go to Oxfam, or whichever agency installed the pump. Other
options, like seeking assistance from the WSD or the newly formed local councils, were
not mentioned.
Agencies that installed pumps arranged for the training of mechanics, and there were
trained mechanics in every village where a pump was installed. In most cases there were
also trained mechanics for protected wells and gravity schemes, and for half the spring
boxes examined. Most had basic tools (mainly spanners) sufficient to take care of above-
16
This is fairly typical of traditional authority structures in Sierra Leone. Only nine out of 149
Paramount Chiefs, for example, are women.
17
The water points were evaluated according to 12 criteria, including whether there was a latrine
within 30m, or a latrine was on higher ground than the water point; whether fencing was adequate;
and whether the headwall was cracked. The range of possible scores was 012.
Water quality
The pattern of contamination risk identified by the sanitary surveys in Kailahun District
was confirmed by water-quality tests carried out using a DelAgua kit. Bacteriological
contamination, pH, and turbidity were tested. The results show that traditional wells,
gravity schemes, and spring boxes are most prone to serious bacteriological
contamination. The trends for bacteriological contamination are shown in Table 6. The
pH values of all the samples were found to be within acceptable limits. Turbidity values
were found to be high in some traditional wells. Generally the turbidity for developed
sources was within acceptable limits.
(For comparison, we note here that the NGO COOPI [Cooperazione Internazionale]
recently tested 16 hand-dug wells in Koidu town, eastern Sierra Leone. Most had been
recently constructed by various agencies and fitted with government-approved hand
pumps. In 10 out of 16 cases there was slight or medium E. Coli contamination. This
could be due to the high level of the water table during the rainy season, and/or to
adjacent mining activities. Many wells also showed poor yield during the dry season.)
Adequately addressing hygiene and sanitation issues has been shown to have a greater
effect on the reduction of diarrhoea than water quality. But to guarantee maximum
impact, all four components must be addressed in an integrated approach to public
health.
18
Current (post-2004) SPHERE standards are zero faecal coliforms per 100ml. Previously the
contamination baseline was over 10/100ml.
19
Presented in Technical Brief no. 52 of Waterlines, WEDC. Original source: S. A. Esrey,
Waterlines, Vol. 14 No. 3, 1996, cited in Strategy Paper on Drinking Water Supply Surveillance,
Bikaba / Becks, Oxfam GB.
Well lining
SALWACO / WSD guidelines say that hand-dug wells should be lined with reinforced
concrete throughout. In adherence to this policy, the hand-dug wells constructed by
Oxfam in Kailahun are all lined to their complete depth. SALWACO / WSD also set out
a recommended internal diameter of 1.8 metres.
In discussions of the findings of this research, Oxfam HELP staff pointed out that an
internal diameter of this size requires the use of a considerable amount of additional
building materials. They felt that the internal diameter of wells used exclusively for
domestic drinking-water purposes may be reduced to 1.4 or 1.2 metres. This would
reduce costs and encourage well-digging. They also queried the need for full well lining,
saying that wells need to be lined and even then, may only need to be partly lined
20
For an overview of the different possible technologies, with the advantages and disadvantages of
each, e.g. see the Rural Water Supply Network (RWSN/skat foundation): Technology Options in
Rural Water Supply, by Erich Baumann, September 2003. See also Handpumps Specification and
Selection Guideline Manual, Oxfam Public Health Engineering Team, September 2003.
21
Self supply is defined as an approach to water supply, which concentrates intervention and
management at a household or small-group level and which is complementary to communal supply.
22
SPHERE guidelines for hand pumps in normal situations are for 250+ people per pump (500 in
emergencies).
23
This section is based upon Demand-Response Approach in Practice: Why Sustainability
Remains Elusive, by Edward (Ned) Breslin, WaterAid, March 2003, with updated information
provided in March 2006.
24
Republic of Mozambique, Action Plan for the Reduction of Absolute Poverty, 20012005
(PARPA, published in April 2001), cited by WaterAid, op. cit.
25
DAS-Niassa Banco de Dados, 2002, cited by WaterAid, op. cit.
26
K. Nyundu and S. Sutton, 2001, cited in WaterAids report, op. cit.
27
For an analysis of the problems of supply chains in Africa, eg see RWSN/skat_foundation:
Supply Chain Issues for WES Facilities by Karl Erpf and Erich Baumann, August 2004; and the
HTN Network for Cost-effective Technologies in Water Supply Issue Paper: Supply Chains,
01/05/03, e-mail [email protected]
28
Sally Sutton calculates a failure rate of five per cent per annum, based on calculations from
inventories in Mozambique, Mali, and Zambia.
Recommendations
A. Move towards a demand-responsive approach
The government of Sierra Leone and humanitarian agencies should move much further
towards a demand-responsive approach (DRA), which means a long-term strategy to
stimulate and respond to community demand and to give communities a real choice of
technologies that they have the capacity to maintain. This means being open to other
possibilities: discussing the advantages and disadvantages of each option, both for water
supply and for water lifting, and presenting communities with financial projections for
the cost of maintenance in each case. Communities must be able to make an informed
choice, and allowed to choose the technologies that best suit their financial and social
resources. As part of DRA:
Rethink in-kind contributions: in line with WaterAids experience in
Mozambique, in-kind contributions should be rethought so that they
demonstrate how government obligations and community responsibility go
hand-in-hand. New models should be found for communities to contribute in
ways that demonstrate greater understanding of, and commitment to, the likely
demands that the chosen technology will make of the community in the future.
Develop realistic government support systems: expecting communities to pay
all operation, maintenance, and replacement costs is not only unrealistic but also
not a sound, equitable policy practice to ensure the provision of water, unless the
technology offered is appropriately simple and cheap. This has been WaterAids
experience in Mozambique, and the Oxfam research strongly suggests that the
same applies in Sierra Leone. There is a need for a clear, transparent, and widely
understood definition of what repairs are likely to be needed, what aspects could
realistically be within the capacity of each community and as such could be
considered their responsibility, and what repairs are beyond their capacity and
are therefore their responsibility to undertake. The challenge is then to develop
on-call government support systems to make those repairs in a fast and
effective way so that communities do not resort to unsafe water sources.
Strengthen government capacity: decentralisation has the potential to give
citizens greater control over basic services, and to stimulate DRA. But
community management needs support; without efficient and sustained
government support at local level, sustainability will always be in doubt. Donors
must invest in long-term support to build up the capacity of the Sierra Leone
government, especially in its decentralisation efforts, so that districts have the
capacity to meet government obligations to increase access to water supply in
29
See Oxfam Strategy Paper on Drinking Water Supply Surveillance.
30
The quality of spare parts for India Mark IIs on the market is said to be very variable (this also
applies to the Afridev in Mozambique), and donors should press manufacturers to improve
standards.
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