Towards Drinking Water Security in India : Lessons from the Field
India being a vast and diverse country, we face many challenges in ensuring reliable, sustainable safe drinking water supply to rural households of the country. Though, in terms of provision of safe drinking water, we have covered more than 90 perc...
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Format: | Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2017
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/921311468041473929/Towards-lessons-from-the-field-in-India-drinking-lessons-from-the-field http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27859 |
Summary: | India being a vast and diverse country,
we face many challenges in ensuring reliable, sustainable
safe drinking water supply to rural households of the
country. Though, in terms of provision of safe drinking
water, we have covered more than 90 percent of the rural
households, according to the National Sample Survey Office
(NSSO) 65th round survey 2008-09, the authors have to
recognize that much remains to be done to improve levels of
service delivery, water quality and sustainability. Though
chemical contamination of drinking water is being tackled
today in the National Rural Drinking Water Program (NRDWP),
bacteriological contamination, which is more dangerous and
also more prevalent, has to be systematically measured and
tackled. This requires convergence with the total sanitation
campaign to ensure an open defecation free and clean
environment. slightly more than 30 percent of rural
households obtain their drinking water supply through taps
which are more convenient, saving time and labour specially
of women and children. however, this varies widely ranging
from less than 5 percent in Uttar Pradesh and Bihar to more
than 80 percent in Tamil Nadu and Himachal Pradesh. With the
help of Water and Sanitation Program (WSP), the department
of drinking water and sanitation has collected some models
of good practices from different parts of the country. Care
has been taken to ensure these are drawn from as many states
as possible. In addition, the good practices identified
cover a variety of areas ranging from improved service
delivery, operation of multi-village schemes, efficient
operation and maintenance, ensuring water quality, measures
to ensure source sustainability, pioneering efforts for
waste water management, effective communication practices
that have been adopted and institutional reforms at state
level that have been tried out. |
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