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Integrated Pro-Poor Water and Waste Water Management in Small towns

This project assists local governments and their civil society partners, including the poor, to develop integrated and participatory strategies for water and wastewater management. It collects and disseminates information on innovative and cost effective technologies and approaches in water and wastewater management that small towns can afford.

The issue

Water is rapidly becoming a scarce resource in the region. One of the key reasons for this scarcity is that water resources are mismanaged and water is wasted on a large scale. In urban areas between 30 to 60 percent of safe drinking water is unaccounted for. Water supply and sanitation services in many towns are financially unsustainable because current tariffs are not even sufficient to cover operation and maintenance costs. This is particularly true for small towns and even more in the poorer neighborhoods of such towns, where the poor end up paying five times as much for water as the rich and the middle classes.

While water supply coverage in urban areas is fairly extensive, sanitation coverage lags behind. Even in those towns that have sanitation infrastructure, waste water is often released in natural waterways without any treatment.

One of the reasons for poor water management is the fact that issues are not addressed holistically and therefore policies and strategies are not integrated

Project Activities

The project builds on the work of the numerous national and international agencies responsible for water and sanitation in Asia and the Pacific. It facilitates knowledge exchange across the region on policies and practices that can extend water and sanitation services for poor citizens.

Case Studies

14 innovative practices from 7 different countries in Asia were documented and are published at www.unescap.org/pdd/water. They describe a wide variety of arrangements to extend water and sanitation services to the urban poor. Among them:

• Community-managed piped water systems
• Public-private-community partnerships
• Low cost sanitation facilities for densely populated areas
• Water-conservation schemes

The detailed documentation pays special attention to the sustainability and potential for replication of each case. The institutional environment of each practice is also analysed. See more

Integrated Water and Sanitation Strategies for small towns

ESCAP is assisting the local governments of Serang (Indonesia) and Villareal (Philippines) in developing pro-poor integrated water and sanitation strategies in their towns. The plans will favour projects that are financially sustainable, require little initial donor funding and encourage community contributions.

The assistance is provided in partnership with national institutions specialised in building capacities of local governments, which can disseminate and replicate the experience in other municipalities. ESCAP will analyze and disseminate the results and lessons learned in other countries of the region.

Capacity Building for Local Governments

Good practices and principles identified by the project are disseminated through face-to-face workshops and e-learning courses.

National workshops have been conducted in Indonesia and The Philippines where 8 local governments learned pro-poor strategies and prepared water and sanitation plans for their cities. Local governments from Cambodia and Viet Nam learned about these practices at an international workshop organised by the United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) and the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR).

E-learning courses on sanitation are being prepared in collaboration with UNITAR, InWent and the World Bank Institute, and are expected to be launched in November 2008.

Download Project Brochure

For more information, contact

Mr. Yap Kioe Sheng
Chief, Poverty Reduction Section
Poverty and Development Division
UNESCAP, UN Building,
Rajdamnern Nok Ave.
Bangkok 10200, Thailand
Tel: 66-2-288-1600
Fax: 66-2-288-1097
E-mail:escap-prs@un.org

 

 

 

 
 
 
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