In this post, I build upon the previous analysis of water scarcity and famine through a case study of community-based water development and management in Cameroon. I begin with a broad overview of the Energy-Water-Food Nexus relationship before zooming into a case study of Kumbo in North-West Cameroon. I then progressively zoom out, analyzing performance indicators of five community water supply networks across Cameroon, before finally evaluating a global-scale review of success factors in rural community water supply management.
There is an intricate link between water, food, and energy security (Smajgl et al., 2016). All three are deeply interconnected in that each resource intricately affects consumption of the others (Hadian and Madani, 2013; Bryan et al., 2015; Hafeez et al., 2020) as illustrated in the Energy-Water-Food Nexus in Figure 1.
Water is fundamental to the Energy-Water-Food Nexus and water insecurity is strongly associated with food insecurity, particularly amongst the most food insecure households (
Nounkeu et al., 2021). Therefore, addressing water security is paramount to addressing food insecurity. To this end, I explore community-based water resource management as a solution addressing water security in the case study of the Kumbo Water Authority (KWA).
In 1991, the residents of Kumbo violently reclaimed ownership of their water supply from national parastatal corporation SNEC as they believed SNEC had taken over a water system constructed and owned by the community, subsequently mismanaging it through fee increases, public tap closures, inadequacies in system maintenance, and filling its ranks with francophones (
Page, 2003). Following the replacement of SNEC by the KWA, prices of domestic connections and public tap stands became more affordable alongside greater availability and access, as illustrated in Figure 2 (
Page, 2003).
Figure 2: Comparison of water price, number of domestic connections and public taps under SNEC and KWA (Page, 2003).
Although the KWA received domestic and international recognition for its successful community-based provision of effective service, system maintenance, and financial management, there is uncertainty in its long-term sustainability (
Page, 2003). The KWA depends significantly on voluntary labor, dilutions of chemicals concentrations at treatment stations, and is insufficiently capitalized enough to afford the necessary extensive overhauls to their 30-year-old pipe network that has reached its design lifespan (
Page, 2003).
To assess the performance and viability of community-based water networks more broadly, I analyzed key indicators across five municipalities in the Northwest, West, and South regions of Cameroon: Kumbo, Ndu, Bandja, Efoulan, and Zoetele. The first two had networks older than 30 years old while the latter three had networks less than 10 years old. Generally, newer networks performed well in efficiency (primary yield) and water loss (LLI) while most networks struggled with unpaid contributions and opening time for new subscribers (
Moussa and Fonteh, 2020).
Therefore, key opportunities for improvement remain in invoice collection systems, customer monitoring, and unlocking income from local authorities who do not pay for water (
Moussa and Fonteh, 2020).
Finally, a global-scale systematic 30-year review of successful community managed rural water supplies has highlighted cooperative initiative, astute leadership, and institutional transparency as paramount internal factors alongside financial assistance and supply of materials as paramount external factors (
Hutchings et al., 2015).
Has been nice to see your personal viewpoints develop and I think you've been strong at making actual points which some of the other blogs have lacked! I've also been really interested in the invoice collections of water - what do you think are some effective solutions to manage this as its such a hard subject? I really feel for them!
ReplyDeleteDear Manny, thank you for your kind feedback. Invoice collections, and non-revenue water (NRW) more broadly, have been incredibly challenging to address. Anecdotal feedback from workers at these water institutions have called for greater empowerment of staff through the adequate provision of transport, equipment, tools, and a reward system that incentivizes greater invoice collections and reductions in NRW. Furthermore, greater monitoring should be implemented alongside more frequent and rigorous audits to ensure that people avoiding payments are appropriately disincentivized. This is an intricate issue to address as the provision of clean water has to strike a fine balance between providing clean water as a basic necessity of life and ensuring its commercial viability.
DeleteGreat read! I was wondering if the incidence rates of water-borne diseases (e.g. cholera) went down after the reclamation of the water supply. Is there any data on this? As access to clean water (for washing hands, cleaning food) is closely related to the occurrences of water-borne diseases.
ReplyDeleteDear Yi Xi, thank you for your positive comment. Unfortunately, there does not seem to be any publicly available data on incidence rates of water-borne diseases pre and post reclamation in the case of Kumbo. This highlights one of the broader challenges in analyzing the efficacy of water systems across Africa: the lack of publicly accurate and reliable data.
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