1 / 29

RURAL WATER AND SANITATION, KENYA IWRM WORKSHOP 19TH MAY, 2009

RURAL WATER AND SANITATION, KENYA IWRM WORKSHOP 19TH MAY, 2009. Rural Water &Sanitation By: Eng. David Njue - Investments Manager(WSTF). DEFINITION. Rural areas are large and isolated areas of a country Often with low population

nardo
Télécharger la présentation

RURAL WATER AND SANITATION, KENYA IWRM WORKSHOP 19TH MAY, 2009

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. RURAL WATER AND SANITATION, KENYA IWRM WORKSHOP 19TH MAY, 2009 Rural Water &Sanitation By: Eng. David Njue - Investments Manager(WSTF)

  2. DEFINITION • Rural areas are large and isolated areas of a country • Often with low population • It is estimated that the population of Kenya is approximately 35 million. Out of this population, 70% (or 24.5 million) live in the rural areas and 30% (or 10.5 million) live in urban areas • 75% in USA • Urban area is an area with high density • May be cities, towns • Not including markets

  3. Water supply in the rural setting • according to national water services strategy (nwss) 2007-2015 the goal is to reach at least 50% of the under served-MDG and move to all by 2030. • Indicators:- • Inventory protection and conservation plan by 20008 • 2008 onwards to have sanitation and hygiene component. • Sustainable projects • Meeting of O&M COST • Project to be implemented to follow CPC process • The challenges are many but can be tackle. • Different technologies • Small un coordinated scheme • Poor quality water source • High illiteracy level. • Lack of financial support • Pumped schemes • Lack of spare parts and artisans • Poor governance • Lack of O&M

  4. Rural water and sanitation coverage in kenya • According to Kenya integrated household survey Only 57% overall is covered by water and sanitation services • 60% Urban • 40% rural setting • mostly community schemes • Point sources include: • Shallow wells, springs protections, boreholes, pans, earth dams, small piped waters schemes

  5. Water sector reforms-why? • The reforms are driven by the National Water Policy on Water Resources Management and Development (1999) and supported by the new Water Act 2002. • To tackle institutional and operational weakness. • Roles of sector player well define • Increase sector funding • Improve technology choice • Improve sector coordination • Improve infrastructure development. • MDG goal 2. to ensure environmental sustainability halving the under served by 2015 • Creation of sector institutions • Benefits of the reforms to RWSS • increased investment and ownership for sustainable RWSS • Improved quality of water sources • Sustainability of water sources • Enforcement of standards • Increase stakeholders awareness

  6. Challenges facing the RWSS IN KENYA • In Kenya the WSS situation is poor for a majority of the people with sustainable access to safe water being estimated at around 60% in the urban setting and drops to as low as 20% in the settlements of the urban poor where half of the urban population lives. Sustainable access to safe water in the rural setting is estimated at 40%. Sanitation coverage country wide is about 50%. • In order to respond to the above challenges, the Government through the MWI has commenced water sector reform provided for in the Water Act 2002 by setting up and operationalizing new water sector institutions.

  7. Current situation of rural water and sanitation in kenya • The Water Services Sub-sector is in the process of finalizing the National Water Service Strategy whose overall goal has been set as to ensure sustainable access to safe water and basic sanitation to all Kenyans. The Strategy sets the goal for Rural Water Supply and Sanitation as follows: • Reaching at least 50% of the underserved in rural areas with safe and affordable water by 2015 (MDG) and thereafter move to sustainable access for all by 2030 • Increasing access to basic sanitation from 45% to 72.5% in the rural setting by 2015. The NWSS strategy sets the targets at reaching at least 50% of the underserved in rural areas with safe and affordable water by 2015 and thereafter move to sustainable access for all by 2030.

  8. EXPERIENCE FROM OTHER COUNTRIES • In Ethiopia the RWS coverage is low averaging 27% • Need a total investment of 25 billion us dollar to reach the MDG • Bangladesh over 115 million live in rural areas. • Water coverage 72%

  9. INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK UNDER WATER ACT 2002

  10. WSTF ROLE IN PROVISION OF WATER IN RURAL AREAS. • The Water Services Sub-sector is in the process of finalizing the National Water Service Strategy whose overall goal has been set as to ensure sustainable access to safe water and basic sanitation to all Kenyans. The Strategy sets the goal for Rural Water Supply and Sanitation as follows: • Reaching at least 50% of the underserved in rural areas with safe and affordable water by 2015 (MDG) and thereafter move to sustainable access for all by 2030 • Increasing access to basic sanitation from 45% to 72.5% in the rural setting by 2015. . The NWSS strategy sets the targets at reaching at least 50% of the underserved in rural areas with safe and affordable water by 2015 and thereafter move to sustainable access for all by 2030. • WSBs are responsible for the provision of water and sanitation services in their areas of jurisdiction, whether urban or rural. WSTF’s mandate, on the other hand, is to provide financing for investments in water and sanitation for the poor and marginalized – in rural and urban areas of Kenya.

  11. Mandate: • To assist in financing the provision of water services to areas of Kenya without adequate water services • Established under the water act 2002, and became operational in March 2005.

  12. Vision • To be a dynamic and innovative leader nationally and in Africa in the financing of the water sector

  13. Mission • To provide financial support for improved access to Water & Sanitation in areas without adequate services • HOW? • Effective Resource Mobilization & Utilization • FROM? • Government of Kenya • Development Partners • Private Sector

  14. Core Values • Accountability, transparency and good governance • Teamwork, equity and fairness • Honesty and integrity • Customer focus • Life-work-balance

  15. Strategic Objectives • To mobilize resources nationally and internationally to enhance provision of water services. 2. To develop and apply systems that ensure proper targeting, financing, implementation and sustainability of water and sanitation projects. 3. To establish and nurture partnerships with stakeholders. • 4. To continuously strengthen the WSTF institutional capacity and enhance staff skills to ensure effective and efficient service delivery. 5. To facilitate capacity building of agents to deliver on the provision of water services.

  16. FUNDING WINDOWS Rural (CPC, OBA, UNICEF WASH) Urban(UPC) Water resources(WDC)

  17. FUNDING MECHANISMS/WINDOWS • Community Project Cycle (CPC) • Urban projects concept (UPC) • WRUAs Development Cycle (WDC) • Out Based Aid (OBA) • UNICEF WASH program

  18. The Community Project Cycle (CPC) Targeting (tenets of cpc) • Poverty Targeting • Community Participation • Sustainability • Gender Mainstreaming • Governance • Accountability and Transparency

  19. OBA • Out-Put Based Aid (OBA) is a funding window designed and piloted by Water and Sanitation Programme (WSP) World Bank . • An approach to leverage co-financing from a private commercial micro-finance Bank – K-Rep Bank. •  The objective of the programme is to increase funding predictability of sustainable water systems owned and managed by Community Based Organizations (CBO’s) referred to as Community Water Projects (CWP’s). • CWPs will access loans which will be subsidized after good performance

  20. UNICEF • A collaboration between Government of Netherlands, GoK, UNICEF and WSTF. • 5 years (2008 – 2009) implementation through the MoWI, public health and education Target districts • ASAL and semi ASAL districts with poor access to water: Mandera, Wajir, Garissa, Ijara, Tana River, Isiolo, Marsabit, West Pokot, Turkana, Mwingi, Kwale, Kajiado, Kieni and Kitui. • Flood Prone districts: Kisumu, Nyando, Bondo, Busia, Siaya and Rachuonyo

  21. UNICEF Cont’ The programme components and expected Outputs are: • Development of new water sources: to reach 1.3 million new users • Rehabilitation of existing water systems: To reach 310,000 people • Household sanitation: To reach 1.65 new users • Hygiene education: To reach 1.95 new practitioners • School water and sanitation: To reach 473,000 school children in 789 schools • Health centre WES: 90 health facilities

  22. Urban Project Concept (UPC) This is an urban programme for funding WATSAN in low income urban areas through low cost innovative technologies e.g. kiosks and onsite public Sanitation. Donors EU,KFW,GTZ, and GOK Objective; • Targeting Urban Poor • Increase Coverage Urban Poor • Improve Urban Sanitation Facilities • Reduce Unaccountable for Water • Project to be Operated by Legal Entity

  23. WDC : WRUA (Water Resources User’s Association) Development Cycle (WDC • This window address issues on water resources management. • Project proposals are developed by WRUA’s (facilitated by WRMA Regional offices) then submitted to WSTF for appraisal and funding consideration. Donor SIDA • Objectives: • Improve on Catchment Management/protection • Increase Water flows in the water Catchment areas • Mitigate on floods and drought • Reduce water conflict by users

  24. Arrangement for pro-poor rural and urban investments WSTF Water Services Boards Big Investments realized directly by WSBs Financing Contract • Capacity Building • Monitoring and Evaluation • through Pool of Consultants, NGOs WRMA € WSP/ Community/WRUAs Implementing body urban rural • CPC • Community Project Cycle: • - point sources • small systems • Funds: € 20 Mio • SIDA, DANIDA UPC URBAN POOR CONCEPT: - Water kiosks - Basic sanitation (public & private) Funds: € KfW 5,5 Mio; EU 10,375 Mio (Cofinanced by KfW and GTZ) WDC Euro 500,Million SIDA Catchment Protection and Improvement

  25. Funds Received

  26. FUNDED PROJECTS SINCE 2004

  27. The Gap In the next five years WSTF intends to reach a target population 6.47million WSTF will need 9.89 billions to implement the projects to meet the MDGs and Vision 2030 with other partners.

  28. WAYFORWARD • Harmonization of procedures • Periodic review of our systems • Continuous monitoring and Evaluation of projects • Regular Auditing of our Systems • Effective and efficient communication with all our stakeholders

  29. Thank you

More Related