Transcript WSP Policy Experiences in Uganda
Water Safety Plan Policy Provisions and Status of Implementation in Uganda
Idrakua Lillian Amegovu Assistant Commissioner Ministry of Water & Environment, Uganda
Presentation Outline
Introduction Provisions in Policy and Legal framework in support of WSPs Ugandan Drinking Water Standards and Strategies Status of Implementation of WSPs in Uganda Challenges Key Success factors for scaling up Conclusion
Introduction
The existing policy and legal framework in Uganda with relevance to water were developed between 1994 – 2000 after the UN conference on Environment and Development in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 where Agenda 21 on freshwater resources was developed The WSP concept started receiving serious international attention after its inclusion in the 4 th ed of the WHO guidelines on drinking water quality in 2004 The existing policy and legal frameworks do not make explicit mention of WSPs. There are provisions however, in these policies and laws that provide enabling environment for: provision of safe drinking water catchment protection Definition of roles for key stakeholders
Provisions for WSP in Policy & Legal Framework
The 1995 Constitution of Uganda acknowledges access to 'clean and safe water’ as a basic human right and that ‘The State shall take all practical measures to promote a good water management system at all levels’ The Water Policy, 1999 provides for setting of national drinking water quality standards as a one of the key functions of water resources management The Water Statute 1995 now The Water Act 2000 provides for • establishment of a protected zone (may erect and maintain fences)on land adjacent to any water, borehole, treatment or other works forming part of a water supply or from which a water supply is drawn • The Director may exercise any functions assigned by the Minister including power to supervise or inspect. (Regulation unit under DWD)
Provisions for WSP in Policy & Legal Framework
• DWD on behalf of the minister enters into Performance contracts with water suppliers. The National Water & Sewerage Corporation Statute, 1995 one of the objectives is to provide water supply services for domestic, etc and to do anything connected or incidental to the above.
The Local Government Act, 1997 Assigns responsibility of provision of water services and maintenance of facilities to local governments and urban centres but recognises the need for central government agencies to provide support and guidance Environment Act (2000) provides for • gazetting of protection zones along river banks and lake shores (source of water supplies) • issuance of pollution licences for pollution control into the environment • establishment of environmental standards including water quality standards
Ugandan Standards and Strategies
In 2008, Uganda reviewed her drinking water quality standards and provisions were made for WSPs in 3 standards: US 201 Drinking (potable) water US 43 Packaged natural mineral waters US 42 Packaged water other than natural mineral waters The 3 standards require operators to develop, operate and maintain a Water Safety Plan taking into consideration the potential risks to the safety of the water from source to consumer observance of the provisions for WSPs shall be subject to periodic checks in accordance with national requirements (Audited by UNBS) Provisional certificates given and companies expected to put in place WSPs within 6 months
Ugandan Standards and Strategies
UNBS has organised 2 training workshops so far for drinking water bottling companies and trained 20 participants. Trainings were facilitated jointly with department of Water Quality Management 3 companies out of the 20 trained have developed necessary documentation The other 17 companies are implementing ISO 22,000 based on HACCP principles
Ugandan Standards and Strategies
National Water Quality Management strategy (2006) •recommends establishment of WSPs at all water facilities in urban centres and based on technology in rural •recommends 50 – 100m radius as protection zone for facilities, reservoirs and specifically 100m for surface water intakes Operation and Maintenance strategy. Functions of the Caretaker include aspects of a WSP The challenge with implementing strategies is that they are not legally binding
Status of WSP Implementation in Uganda
National Water & Sewerage Corporation has established WSPs for the 23 Large towns under their jurisdiction with varying levels of complexity. Population served by NWSC towns is 2.9 million people out of approximately to 32 million Out of 137 urban centres with piped water supplies, 114 small towns do not have WSPs Rural population (27m) served mainly by point water sources: GFS, boreholes, protected springs and shallow wells with no WSPs Ministry of Water & Environment (Policy Maker & Regulator) has a demonstration WSP at 1 small water supply as a way of supporting PWO in implementing WSPs
Status of WSP Implementation in Uganda
Challenges at Kyenjojo Water Supply Demonstration WSP •inadequate capacity of the private water operators •inadequate documentation of the system (designs and equipment) •Lack of record keeping •finding skilled team members was a problem •team members taking on additional roles on voluntary basis was an issue •maintaining a constant composition of trained team members and •identifying willing external stakeholders and engaging them.
Challenges
Multiple stakeholders with different roles to play along the water supply chain. Most challenging loop is the management of the water catchment (source of raw water) Piped Water Supply System Catchment Treatment Distribution Consumer Responsibility Water Resources sub- sector Environment Agriculture Local governments NGOs NWSC Water Authorities Local governments Health DWD UNBS Discussions on WSPs limit ‘the water catchment’ to the source of the raw water
Challenges
Challenges
Land tenure system and land use practices are a threat to catchment protection Inadequate capacity among Regulators (Regulation unit, UNBS and DWRM) and water suppliers ( Private Water Operators for WSPs implementation except NWSC) Overlaps in roles: standard setting Weak compliance and enforcement of regulations Lack of priority for water quality issues visa viz production
Key success factors for scaling up
Awareness raising/Sensitisation of stakeholders at all levels to : introduce the WSP concept and its benefits change attitudes solicit support bring relevant stakeholders on board Include WSP in Performance contracts as an immediate measure to enforce implementation Streamline institutional roles in order to enforce implementation of WSPs and carry out audits Capacity development
Key success factors for scaling up
Development of resource materials (IEC materials including visual aid) for operators as reference materials at country level Provision of technical support Documentation of benefits to encourage willingness to try out the new concept and influence policy changes To create impact for WSPs, other small towns and small water supplies in the rural areas have to be brought on board now
Conclusion
Currently the WSP concept is missing in the main water laws in Uganda: Water Policy & Water Act WSPs however, have been incorporated in the Ugandan standards for potable water and bottled water. The standards and guidelines however are regulatory instruments that implement the Policy and Act.
WSPs however, can be implemented within existing policies and regulations which have provisions for catchment protection , establishment of systems to ensure safety of drinking water and defined institutional roles