Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa

With only 56 percent of the population enjoying access to safe water, Sub-Saharan Africa lags behind other regions in terms of access to improved water sources. Based on present trends, it appears that the region is unlikely to meet the target of 7...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Banerjee, Sudeshna, Skilling, Heather, Foster, Vivien, Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia, Morella, Elvira, Chfadi, Tarik
Format: Other Infrastructure Study
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/10470371/africa-ebbing-water-surging-deficits-urban-water-supply-sub-saharan-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7835
id okr-10986-7835
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
ACCESS TO SAFE WATER
ACCESS TO WATER
BOREHOLES
BULK SUPPLIERS
BULK WATER
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
COLLECTION EFFICIENCY
CONCESSION CONTRACTS
CONNECTION
CONNECTION FEES
CONSUMER REPRESENTATION
COST RECOVERY
COVERING
CUBIC METER
DECISION MAKING
DEMAND MANAGEMENT
DISTILLATION
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
DISTRIBUTION OF WATER
DRINKING WATER
DUG WELLS
EFFECTIVE WATER
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS
HAND PUMPS
HIGHER COLLECTION
HOUSEHOLD CONNECTIONS
HOUSEHOLDS
INSUFFICIENT WATER
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS
IRRIGATION
LAKES
LARGE UTILITIES
LARGE UTILITY
LITERS PER CAPITA PER DAY
LOCAL CAPACITY
METERING
MONITORING PROGRAM
NATIONAL WATER
NONREVENUE WATER
NUMBER OF PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS
OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE
OPERATORS
PERFORMANCE CONTRACT
PERFORMANCE DATA
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
PIPED WATER
PONDS
POPULATION GROWTH
PRESSURE
PRIVATE OPERATOR
PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
PUBLIC STANDPOSTS
PUBLIC TAP
PUBLIC UTILITIES
QUALITY OF SERVICE
QUALITY OF WATER
QUALITY STANDARDS
RAINWATER
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY BODIES
REGULATORY CAPACITY
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REGULATORY FUNCTION
REGULATORY STRUCTURES
RESIDENTIAL CONNECTIONS
RURAL WATER
RURAL WATER SUPPLY
SANITATION ACCESS
SANITATION AUTHORITY
SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION PROGRAM
SANITATION SECTOR
SCARCE WATER
SCARCE WATER RESOURCES
SERVICE DELIVERY
SERVICE PROVIDER
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SERVICE PROVISION
SERVICE STANDARDS
SEWERAGE
SEWERAGE AUTHORITY
SEWERAGE COMPANY
SLUM POPULATION
SMALL-SCALE SERVICE PROVIDERS
SPRINGS
SURFACE WATER
TARIFF ADJUSTMENT
TARIFF ADJUSTMENTS
TARIFF SETTING
TECHNICAL STANDARDS
TOWN
URBAN AREAS
URBAN ENVIRONMENT
URBAN HOUSEHOLDS
URBAN RESIDENTS
URBAN SANITATION
URBAN SLUM
URBAN WATER
URBAN WATER SECTOR
URBAN WATER SERVICES
URBAN WATER SUPPLY
URBANIZATION
USERS
UTILITY EFFICIENCY
UTILITY STAFF
UTILITY STRUCTURE
WASTEWATER
WASTEWATER SERVICES
WATER BOARD
WATER COLLECTION
WATER COMPANY
WATER CONNECTION
WATER CONNECTIONS
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER COVERAGE
WATER DISTRIBUTION
WATER LAW
WATER MARKET
WATER POLICY
WATER PRICING
WATER PRODUCTION
WATER PROVIDERS
WATER QUALITY
WATER RATES
WATER REGULATION
WATER RESOURCES
WATER SECTOR
WATER SECTOR REFORM
WATER SERVICE
WATER SERVICE DELIVERY
WATER SERVICE PROVIDERS
WATER SERVICE PROVISION
WATER SERVICES
WATER SHORTAGES
WATER SOURCE
WATER SOURCES
WATER STANDPOSTS
WATER SYSTEMS
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WATER UTILITY
WATER VENDORS
WELLS
spellingShingle ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
ACCESS TO SAFE WATER
ACCESS TO WATER
BOREHOLES
BULK SUPPLIERS
BULK WATER
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
COLLECTION EFFICIENCY
CONCESSION CONTRACTS
CONNECTION
CONNECTION FEES
CONSUMER REPRESENTATION
COST RECOVERY
COVERING
CUBIC METER
DECISION MAKING
DEMAND MANAGEMENT
DISTILLATION
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
DISTRIBUTION OF WATER
DRINKING WATER
DUG WELLS
EFFECTIVE WATER
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS
HAND PUMPS
HIGHER COLLECTION
HOUSEHOLD CONNECTIONS
HOUSEHOLDS
INSUFFICIENT WATER
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS
IRRIGATION
LAKES
LARGE UTILITIES
LARGE UTILITY
LITERS PER CAPITA PER DAY
LOCAL CAPACITY
METERING
MONITORING PROGRAM
NATIONAL WATER
NONREVENUE WATER
NUMBER OF PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS
OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE
OPERATORS
PERFORMANCE CONTRACT
PERFORMANCE DATA
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
PIPED WATER
PONDS
POPULATION GROWTH
PRESSURE
PRIVATE OPERATOR
PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
PUBLIC STANDPOSTS
PUBLIC TAP
PUBLIC UTILITIES
QUALITY OF SERVICE
QUALITY OF WATER
QUALITY STANDARDS
RAINWATER
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY BODIES
REGULATORY CAPACITY
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS
REGULATORY FUNCTION
REGULATORY STRUCTURES
RESIDENTIAL CONNECTIONS
RURAL WATER
RURAL WATER SUPPLY
SANITATION ACCESS
SANITATION AUTHORITY
SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION PROGRAM
SANITATION SECTOR
SCARCE WATER
SCARCE WATER RESOURCES
SERVICE DELIVERY
SERVICE PROVIDER
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SERVICE PROVISION
SERVICE STANDARDS
SEWERAGE
SEWERAGE AUTHORITY
SEWERAGE COMPANY
SLUM POPULATION
SMALL-SCALE SERVICE PROVIDERS
SPRINGS
SURFACE WATER
TARIFF ADJUSTMENT
TARIFF ADJUSTMENTS
TARIFF SETTING
TECHNICAL STANDARDS
TOWN
URBAN AREAS
URBAN ENVIRONMENT
URBAN HOUSEHOLDS
URBAN RESIDENTS
URBAN SANITATION
URBAN SLUM
URBAN WATER
URBAN WATER SECTOR
URBAN WATER SERVICES
URBAN WATER SUPPLY
URBANIZATION
USERS
UTILITY EFFICIENCY
UTILITY STAFF
UTILITY STRUCTURE
WASTEWATER
WASTEWATER SERVICES
WATER BOARD
WATER COLLECTION
WATER COMPANY
WATER CONNECTION
WATER CONNECTIONS
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER COVERAGE
WATER DISTRIBUTION
WATER LAW
WATER MARKET
WATER POLICY
WATER PRICING
WATER PRODUCTION
WATER PROVIDERS
WATER QUALITY
WATER RATES
WATER REGULATION
WATER RESOURCES
WATER SECTOR
WATER SECTOR REFORM
WATER SERVICE
WATER SERVICE DELIVERY
WATER SERVICE PROVIDERS
WATER SERVICE PROVISION
WATER SERVICES
WATER SHORTAGES
WATER SOURCE
WATER SOURCES
WATER STANDPOSTS
WATER SYSTEMS
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WATER UTILITY
WATER VENDORS
WELLS
Banerjee, Sudeshna
Skilling, Heather
Foster, Vivien
Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia
Morella, Elvira
Chfadi, Tarik
Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
geographic_facet Africa
relation Africa infrastructure country diagnostic background paper ; no. 12
description With only 56 percent of the population enjoying access to safe water, Sub-Saharan Africa lags behind other regions in terms of access to improved water sources. Based on present trends, it appears that the region is unlikely to meet the target of 75 percent access to improved water by 2015, as specified in the Millennium Development Goals (MDG). The welfare implications of safe water cannot be overstated. The estimated health and time-saving benefits of meeting the MDG goal are about 11 times as high as the associated costs. Monitoring the progress of infrastructure sectors such as water supply has been a significant by-product of the MDG, and serious attention and funding have been devoted in recent years to developing systems for monitoring and evaluating in developing countries. Piped water reaches more urban Africans than any other form of water supply-but not as large a share as it did in the early 1990s. The most recent available data for 32 countries suggests that some 39 percent of the urban population of Sub-Saharan Africa is connected to a piped network, compared with 50 percent in the early 1990s. Analysis suggests that the majority of those who lack access to utility water live too far away from the distribution network, although some fail to connect even when they live close by. Water-sector institutions follow no consistent pattern in Sub-Saharan Africa. Where service is centralized, a significant minority has chosen to combine power and water services into a single national multi-utility urban water sector reforms were carried out in the 1990s, with the aim of creating commercially oriented utilities and bringing the sector under formal regulation. One goal of the reforms was to attract private participation in the sector.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Other Infrastructure Study
author Banerjee, Sudeshna
Skilling, Heather
Foster, Vivien
Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia
Morella, Elvira
Chfadi, Tarik
author_facet Banerjee, Sudeshna
Skilling, Heather
Foster, Vivien
Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia
Morella, Elvira
Chfadi, Tarik
author_sort Banerjee, Sudeshna
title Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_short Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_full Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_fullStr Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_full_unstemmed Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa
title_sort africa - ebbing water, surging deficits : urban water supply in sub-saharan africa
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/10470371/africa-ebbing-water-surging-deficits-urban-water-supply-sub-saharan-africa
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7835
_version_ 1764403107111895040
spelling okr-10986-78352021-04-23T14:02:35Z Africa - Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits : Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa Banerjee, Sudeshna Skilling, Heather Foster, Vivien Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia Morella, Elvira Chfadi, Tarik ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER ACCESS TO SAFE WATER ACCESS TO WATER BOREHOLES BULK SUPPLIERS BULK WATER CENTRAL GOVERNMENT COLLECTION EFFICIENCY CONCESSION CONTRACTS CONNECTION CONNECTION FEES CONSUMER REPRESENTATION COST RECOVERY COVERING CUBIC METER DECISION MAKING DEMAND MANAGEMENT DISTILLATION DISTRIBUTION NETWORK DISTRIBUTION OF WATER DRINKING WATER DUG WELLS EFFECTIVE WATER GOOD GOVERNANCE GOVERNANCE ARRANGEMENTS HAND PUMPS HIGHER COLLECTION HOUSEHOLD CONNECTIONS HOUSEHOLDS INSUFFICIENT WATER INVESTMENT CLIMATE INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS IRRIGATION LAKES LARGE UTILITIES LARGE UTILITY LITERS PER CAPITA PER DAY LOCAL CAPACITY METERING MONITORING PROGRAM NATIONAL WATER NONREVENUE WATER NUMBER OF PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE OPERATORS PERFORMANCE CONTRACT PERFORMANCE DATA PERFORMANCE INDICATORS PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE PIPED WATER PONDS POPULATION GROWTH PRESSURE PRIVATE OPERATOR PRIVATE PARTICIPATION PUBLIC STANDPOSTS PUBLIC TAP PUBLIC UTILITIES QUALITY OF SERVICE QUALITY OF WATER QUALITY STANDARDS RAINWATER REGULATORY AGENCIES REGULATORY AGENCY REGULATORY BODIES REGULATORY CAPACITY REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT REGULATORY FRAMEWORK REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS REGULATORY FUNCTION REGULATORY STRUCTURES RESIDENTIAL CONNECTIONS RURAL WATER RURAL WATER SUPPLY SANITATION ACCESS SANITATION AUTHORITY SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION PROGRAM SANITATION SECTOR SCARCE WATER SCARCE WATER RESOURCES SERVICE DELIVERY SERVICE PROVIDER SERVICE PROVIDERS SERVICE PROVISION SERVICE STANDARDS SEWERAGE SEWERAGE AUTHORITY SEWERAGE COMPANY SLUM POPULATION SMALL-SCALE SERVICE PROVIDERS SPRINGS SURFACE WATER TARIFF ADJUSTMENT TARIFF ADJUSTMENTS TARIFF SETTING TECHNICAL STANDARDS TOWN URBAN AREAS URBAN ENVIRONMENT URBAN HOUSEHOLDS URBAN RESIDENTS URBAN SANITATION URBAN SLUM URBAN WATER URBAN WATER SECTOR URBAN WATER SERVICES URBAN WATER SUPPLY URBANIZATION USERS UTILITY EFFICIENCY UTILITY STAFF UTILITY STRUCTURE WASTEWATER WASTEWATER SERVICES WATER BOARD WATER COLLECTION WATER COMPANY WATER CONNECTION WATER CONNECTIONS WATER CONSUMPTION WATER COVERAGE WATER DISTRIBUTION WATER LAW WATER MARKET WATER POLICY WATER PRICING WATER PRODUCTION WATER PROVIDERS WATER QUALITY WATER RATES WATER REGULATION WATER RESOURCES WATER SECTOR WATER SECTOR REFORM WATER SERVICE WATER SERVICE DELIVERY WATER SERVICE PROVIDERS WATER SERVICE PROVISION WATER SERVICES WATER SHORTAGES WATER SOURCE WATER SOURCES WATER STANDPOSTS WATER SYSTEMS WATER TARIFFS WATER UTILITIES WATER UTILITY WATER VENDORS WELLS With only 56 percent of the population enjoying access to safe water, Sub-Saharan Africa lags behind other regions in terms of access to improved water sources. Based on present trends, it appears that the region is unlikely to meet the target of 75 percent access to improved water by 2015, as specified in the Millennium Development Goals (MDG). The welfare implications of safe water cannot be overstated. The estimated health and time-saving benefits of meeting the MDG goal are about 11 times as high as the associated costs. Monitoring the progress of infrastructure sectors such as water supply has been a significant by-product of the MDG, and serious attention and funding have been devoted in recent years to developing systems for monitoring and evaluating in developing countries. Piped water reaches more urban Africans than any other form of water supply-but not as large a share as it did in the early 1990s. The most recent available data for 32 countries suggests that some 39 percent of the urban population of Sub-Saharan Africa is connected to a piped network, compared with 50 percent in the early 1990s. Analysis suggests that the majority of those who lack access to utility water live too far away from the distribution network, although some fail to connect even when they live close by. Water-sector institutions follow no consistent pattern in Sub-Saharan Africa. Where service is centralized, a significant minority has chosen to combine power and water services into a single national multi-utility urban water sector reforms were carried out in the 1990s, with the aim of creating commercially oriented utilities and bringing the sector under formal regulation. One goal of the reforms was to attract private participation in the sector. 2012-06-12T17:59:59Z 2012-06-12T17:59:59Z 2008-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/06/10470371/africa-ebbing-water-surging-deficits-urban-water-supply-sub-saharan-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7835 English Africa infrastructure country diagnostic background paper ; no. 12 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Infrastructure Study Economic & Sector Work Africa