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Emerging
alternative institutional forms for managing domestic water in Harare
Upenyu
Makoni-Muchemwa, Kubatana.net
October 22, 2010
Millennium Development
Goal number seven aims to reduce by half the population without
access to sustainable drinking water. It is estimated that Sub-Saharan
Africa will achieve sustainable access to drinking water by 2040,
and access to adequate sanitation by 2076.
The delivery
of water and sanitation services in Zimbabwe has been contentious
one since the creation of ZINWA and the subsequent decline in service
delivery by City of Harare.
In 2008, approximately
39% of urban residents had access to piped water, as compared to
50% in the late 1990s. It may be assumed that the percentage of
the urban population with access to clean water is now even lower.
Factors that have contributed to this decline include the disastrous
economic policies of the past decade and governance issues which
have resulted in mismanagement of water resources. In recent years
these problems have been exacerbated by a skills shortage in the
water and sanitation services.
The shortage
of water in Harare has forced residents to find alternative means
to meet their domestic water requirements. International standards
recommend a minimum usage of 40 litres per person per day. In Zimbabwe,
with about a quarter of the population affected by water shortages,
usage is as low as 5 litres a day.
With this in
mind, Dr. E Manzungu of the University
of Zimbabwe applied for and won a research grant from the UNESCO-IHE
global Partnership for Water Education and Research for the purpose
of conducting a research study.
The study's
objective is to find out how households of different socio-economic
backgrounds, as individuals and a collective:
- Cope with
or adapt to water shortage;
- To what
extent do their efforts meet household and community water needs;
- The impact
of these alternatives on household water and health security;
and
- Whether
the emerging alternative arrangements for domestic water and sanitation
provision are sustainable
85% of this
study will be conducted in Harare, Zimbabwe, with 15% being conducted
in South Africa by Dr. Lewis Jonker of the University of the Western
Cape. It is hoped that the data will be useful for comparing citizen
responses to the water crisis in these two different contexts.
This study is
part of many efforts to improve water supply in urban areas in Zimbabwe
and Africa. The project rationale being that if local initiatives
are sustainable, then it may be possible for policy makers to apply
these in addressing water shortages.
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