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Water supply and sanitation in Uganda

The Ugandan water supply and sanitation sector made substantial progress in urban areas from the mid-1990s until at least 2006, with substantial increases in coverage as well as in operational and commercial performance.[9]: pages 3–4  Sector reforms from 1998 to 2003 included the commercialization and modernization of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC) operating in cities and larger towns, as well as decentralization and private sector participation in small towns.[10]: page 15 

Water supply and sanitation in Uganda
Data
Water coverage (broad definition)("at least basic sanitation" / improved sanitation facilities) 92% / 79% (in 2015)[1]
Sanitation coverage (broad definition)("at least basic sanitation" / improved sanitation) 93% / 19% (in 2015)[2]
Continuity of supply20–24 hours per day in large towns[3]: page 58 
Average urban water use (L/person/day)44[4]
Average urban water and sanitation tariff (US$/m3)0.64[5]
Share of household metering99% in large towns (2006)[3]: page 23 
Annual investment in WSSUS$2.37 per capita[6][7][8]
Share of external financingMainly external donors
Institutions
Decentralization to municipalitiesSince 1997:
To districts, towns and sub-counties[3]: page 8 
National water and sanitation companyNational Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC), in large towns
Water and sanitation regulatorNone
Responsibility for policy settingMinistry of Water and Environment
Sector lawNone
No. of urban service providersn/a
No. of rural service providersn/a

These reforms have attracted significant international attention. Thirty-eight percent of the population, however, still had no access to an improved water source in 2010. Concerning access to improved sanitation, figures vary widely. According to government figures, it was 70 percent in rural areas and 81 percent in urban areas[11] while according to the United Nations (UN), access was only 34 percent.[12]

The water and sanitation sector was recognized as a key area under the 2004 Poverty Eradication Action Plan (PEAP), Uganda's main strategy paper to fight poverty.[13] A comprehensive expenditure framework was introduced to coordinate financial support by external donors, the national government, and non-governmental organizations.[3]: page 5  The PEAP estimated that from 2001 to 2015, about US$1.4 billion in total (US$92 million per year) was needed to increase water supply coverage up to 95 percent.[14]

Access

In 2015, around 24 percent of the population lacked access to "at least basic water" in Uganda. Access to at least basic water was 39 percent of the total population, or 73% of the urban population and 32% of the rural population. Regarding sanitation, only 19% of the total population had access to "at least basic sanitation", or 28% of the urban population and 17% of the rural population. Around 31 million people did not have access to "at least basic sanitation" in 2015.[15][16] The Human Rights Measurement Initiative has given Uganda a score of 22.9% with regards to basic sanitation, and 9.5% for water supply.

In earlier years, access to "improved water" had increased from 43 percent in 1990 to 72 percent in 2010, according to estimates by the Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation (JMP) of the UN. In the same period, access to "improved sanitation" increased slightly from 27 to 34 percent.[12]

The Water and Environment Sector Performance Report of the Ugandan Ministry of Water and Irrigation, however, showed markedly different access figures. According to this report, in 2011, access to "safe water" was 66 percent while access to improved sanitation was 70 percent in rural areas and 81 percent in urban areas.[11] Eighty-seven percent of the population lived in rural areas in 2010.[12]

According to the European Union (EU), the number of people defecating in the open fell substantially between 2000 and 2008, even though the government provides no subsidies for the construction of latrines.[17] According to the JMP's estimates, however, the number of people defecating in the open declined only from 3.5 million in 2000 to 3.2 million in 2010.[11] The reasons for the different assessments are unclear.

The most common technology options for rural water supply are protected springs, boreholes, protected wells, and gravity flow schemes.[10]: page 64  Those who do not have access to an improved source of water must rely on unsafe sources such as rivers, lakes, and unprotected wells. One consequence of poor access and quality is that water-borne diseases are a major cause of infant mortality.[18] Access to functioning water sources varied considerably among districts in 2007, from 12 to 95 percent.[6]

The national government aimed to reach universal water supply and sanitation coverage in urban areas and 77 percent water supply and 95 percent sanitation coverage by 2015. At the time these goals were set, the government defined access to improved water supply and sanitation as follows: improved water supply in urban areas is given through an improved water source within a walking distance of 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi) in rural areas and 0.2 kilometres (0.12 mi) in urban areas. Sanitation coverage is given through sanitation facilities in the place of residence.[10]: page 12 

Service quality

Continuity of supply

According to Maxwell Stamp PLC, those who received a piped water supply in 2003 in the nation's capital Kampala were "usually" supplied continuously for 24 hours per day.[19] NWSC, however, acknowledged that parts of Kampala such as Kyaliwajala, Kulambiro, and most places on hilltops suffered from chronic water shortages. In addition, some areas went without water for a week when repairs were undertaken.[20] In other towns, Maxwell Stamp PLC found in 2003 that most customers were supplied more than five days per week.[19]

MWE indicated in 2006 that piped water in large towns was usually available for 20–24 hours per day.[3]: page 58 

Drinking water quality

Under the fourth Water and Sanitation Sector Performance Assessment, based on analyses by several subsectors and NGOs carried out in 2006, it was found that 90 percent and 95 percent of the water samples taken from protected and treated water supplies, respectively, met national standards for drinking water quality. This assessment comprised both rural and urban water supply.[21]

Wastewater treatment

As of 2012, 90 percent of the collected wastewater of Kampala was discharged without any treatment. NWSC operates a small conventional sewage treatment plant in Kampala and another in Masaka.[22] In the case of Kampala, the wastewater is discharged into the Nakivubo wetland. The wetland is estimated to provide economic benefits of up to US$1.75 million per year, removing nutrients from untreated and partially treated wastewater discharged from Kampala through the wetland into Lake Victoria.[23][10]: page 106 

As part of a Sanitation Master Plan for Kampala carried out by Fichtner Consultants with financing from Germany, four wastewater treatment plants were planned. The plans included a plant with a capacity of 45,000 cubic metres (1,600,000 cu ft) per day at Nakivubo, a plant with a capacity of 8,000 cubic metres (280,000 cu ft) per day at Kinawataka, a fecal sludge treatment plant with a capacity of 200 cubic metres (7,100 cu ft) per day at Lubigi, and another plant at Nalukolongo. The plan also foresaw the construction of ecological latrines at schools, market places, and health centres and hygiene education at schools.[24][25] The investments were to be funded by the European Union, the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and Germany. The existing plant at Bugolobi was planned to be decommissioned once the new plants became operational.[26]

In smaller towns, NWSC operates 21 sewage stabilization ponds.[22] According to the MWE, an analysis of municipal effluents carried out in July 2008 revealed that NWSC's wastewater treatment facilities mostly do not meet national standards. Out of 223 data sets, 12 percent complied with the biochemical oxygen demand standards, 26 percent with the phosphorus standards, and 40 percent with the total suspended solids standards. This leads to the pollution of water bodies from which raw water is extracted.[6] In a few cases, sewage was disposed directly into the environment without any treatment.[10]: page 85  The lack of functioning wastewater treatment poses a threat to the environment and human health.

Customer satisfaction

A customer satisfaction survey was carried out in 2009–2010 for all towns served by NWSC. It covered questions such as satisfaction with water reliability, water pressure, water quality, timely and accurate water bills, responsiveness in resolving complaints, responsiveness in effecting new connections, customer care, and the convenience of the bill payment process. Out of 5,319 customers contacted in a stratified sample, 2,731 responded. Customer care received the highest rating, while water quality and pressure received lower, but overall good, ratings. A customer satisfaction index was calculated across all questions, showing that 85 percent of customers were satisfied, up from 83 percent during the last survey. Satisfaction was highest in Hoima, Iganda, and Masindi at 95 percent and lowest in the central Ugandan town of Mubende, where no customer care officer or desk existed, at 62 percent. In Kampala, satisfaction was 83 percent. Customers appreciated the ambiance in local offices, that phone calls are made to remind customers of payment, that customers can settle their arrears through payment plans in exceptional cases, and that water cuts are announced through the radio. Customers complained about low water pressure, muddy water during the wet season, supply interruptions during the dry season, low water pressure, slow implementation of new connections, erratic bills, disconnection despite having paid their water bills, and the rudeness of field staff.[27]

Water resources

 
Rivers and lakes of Uganda.

Overview

As a whole, Uganda has more than enough freshwater. Estimates indicate 66 cubic kilometres (16 cu mi) of renewable water resources per year, which correspond to approximately 2,800 cubic metres (740,000 US gal) per person and year. The distribution of the resource, however, is uneven both in spatial and temporal terms. Furthermore, freshwater is increasingly exploited through population growth, urbanization, agriculture, and industrialization.

Rivers, lakes, and wetlands cover about 18 percent of Uganda's total surface, including Lake Victoria, Africa's largest lake and one of the major sources of the Nile, the world's longest river. Almost the entire country lies within the Nile drainage basin. Rainfall contributes the most to the country's surface water and groundwater. The average annual rainfall ranges from 900 millimetres (35 in) in the semi-arid areas of Kotido to 2,000 millimetres (79 in) on the Sese Islands in Lake Victoria.[10]: pages 38–57 

There are no groundwater recharge assessments for Uganda, which is why the country's groundwater potential is unknown. Regional assessments in Ugandan towns, however, have indicated that groundwater recharge meets the current abstraction volumes. To monitor the quantity and quality of groundwater and surface water, the National Water Resources network has been established under the responsibility of the Water Resources Management Department.[10]: pages 38–57 

Lake Victoria

Between 2003 and 2006, Lake Victoria lost 75 million cubic meters, about 69 percent of its volume, but has since recovered to above normal.[28] The causes of the decline were disputed. According to some reports, the 10-15 percent decline in rainfall in the lake's basin caused the lake to lower.[29] According to Daniel Kull, at the time a hydrologist with the UN's International Strategy for Disaster Reduction in Nairobi, the drought would have caused only half the water loss actually seen if two hydroelectric dams at the outlet of the lake into the White Nile had been operated according to the "agreed curve" determined in a 1953 agreement on the Nile flows between Uganda and Egypt.[29] Sandy-Stevens Tickodri-Togboa, professor of engineering mathematics at Makerere University, disagreed and calculated that the drought caused 80 to 85 percent of the decline.[30]

Kampala and Entebbe are supplied with water from Lake Victoria through four treatment plants: Ggaba I, II and III as well as a recently built plant in Katosi in Mukono District.[citation needed]

Water use

According to the PEAP for 2004–5 to 2007–8, water use in rural areas ranged between 12 and 14 liters per person per day (L/p/d). In urban towns and centers with a population of more than 5,000 people, the PEAP estimated an average consumption of less than 17 L/p/d. The national target is an average consumption of 20 L/p/d.[31]

According to the NWSC's annual report, the utility's total water production from July 2007 to June 2008 (fiscal year 2007/2008) for 23 towns was 63,600,000 cubic metres (2.25×109 cu ft), of which 79 percent were produced in Kampala. Domestic customers used 46.9 percent or 29,800,000 cubic metres (1.05×109 cu ft) of NWSC's total production. Divided by the 1,944,741 people whom NWSC served at the end of June 2008, this corresponds to 15.3 cubic metres (540 cu ft) per person per year or 44 L/p/d.[4]

History and recent developments

The first piped water systems were completed during the colonial period in the 1930s. Water-borne sewerage was introduced after 1937. The construction of new facilities increased from 1950 to 1965 under the framework of large national development programs.[32] Later, the existing systems were only partly maintained and no new facilities were constructed until 1990. According to a UN-Water document, by 1990 the urban water infrastructure served less than 10 percent of the population in large towns.[10]: page 78 

Around the end of the 1980s, international donors began to invest substantial financial resources to rehabilitate and renew the water network in Kampala.[33] For example, the World Bank contributed US$60 million under the Water Supply Project, which was active from 1990 to 1998 (see below).[34] Although the financial support helped to rehabilitate the infrastructure, the commercial performance of NWSC was still unsatisfactory.[33]

The reform of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation

Description of the reform process

The NWSC was created as a government-owned parastatal organization in 1972 under the national administration of Idi Amin Dada, serving only Entebbe, Jinja, and the capital city Kampala.[35]: p. 3  Its service area then grew gradually to incorporate large and mid-sized towns all over Uganda, reaching a total of 23 cities and towns in 2008, and 40 cities and towns in another extension of its service area in February 2014.[36]

In 1995[37] and 2000,[citation needed] NWSC was reorganized under the NWSC Statute and NWSC Act, giving it substantial operational autonomy and the mandate to operate and provide water and sewerage in areas entrusted to it, on a sound, commercial, and viable basis.[37] Internal reforms at NWSC started in 1998, beginning with a "Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats" (SWOT) analysis initiated by a new management team. At that time, the utility benefited from a recently rehabilitated water and sewerage infrastructure, including abundant water production capacity and a high level of metering, a competent senior management team, and a good and enabling water legislative framework providing NWSC with relative autonomy. On the other hand, NWSC was in bad condition with regard to operational and financial aspects. For example, non-revenue water (NRW), water which is produced but not billed for several reasons such as leakage and illegal connections, stood at 60 percent. The utility was heavily overstaffed, and staff costs accounted for 64 percent of the total operating costs.[35]: p. 5 

In late 1998, the national government appointed William Tsimwa Muhairwe as the managing director of NWSC. He had been managing public companies in Uganda and elsewhere. Under a new board, more emphasis was placed on commercial viability. At the same time, political interference within the utility was reduced. The new management soon drew up several programs to implement the principles, the first of which was the 100-days program, aiming to adjust operational and financial inefficiencies.[9]: pages 3–4 

Programs to improve financial and operational efficiency of NWSC[9]: page 4 
Program Objective(s) Measures Time of implementation
100-days program Reverse of operational and financial inefficiencies Improved revenue collection and cost-cutting measures February 1999 – May 1999
Service and revenue enhancement program Restoring customer confidence Introduction of service centers and help desks, customer surveys August 1999 – August 2000
Area and service performance contracts Commercial sustainability Managers were given more autonomy and liability through performance contracts 2000–2003
Stretch-out program Improving team work More staff involvement, flatter hierarchical structure 2002–2003
One-minute management program Individual performance accountability Incentives for achievements of individual goals 2003
Internally delegated area management contracts (IDAMCs) Increasing autonomy and liability of area managers Internal contracts including explicit targets and incentives Since 2003

Since 2000, NWSC has worked under performance contracts with the national government, each of which covered three years. The contracts contain specific performance indicators, which the NWSC is expected to achieve. For example, the 2003–2006 contract required NWSC to reduce NRW from 39 percent in 2003 to 36 percent in 2006. Simultaneously, inactive connections were required to be reduced from 21 to 13 percent. To encourage management to achieve the targets, an incentive element of 25 percent of the annual basic salary depended on the fulfillment of the contract. Each year the NWSC board decides the appropriate bonus rate that the NWSC management receives.[38]

Results and analysis

The improvement of NWSC concerning access and operational performance is indisputable. Some of the achievements are:

Performance indicators for NWSC (1998–2012)[39]
1997-98
1999–2000
2003-04
2006-07
2007-8
2010-11
2011-12
2012-13[40]
Operating profit
before depreciation
(EBDIT) (USh billion)[41]
1.5 3.0 11.0 18.0 16.0 30.4 36.1 39.8
Non-revenue water[42] 51% 43% 38% 33% 33% 33% 33% 34%
Collection efficiency 60% 76% 98% 92% 92% 96% 98% 96%
Connections[43] 51,000 59,000 100,000 181,000 202,000 272,400 296,200 317,300
Employees 1784 1454 949 1388 1691 1773 1858
Labor productivity
(Employees/1,000 connections)
35 25 9 8 7 6 6

NWSC has been turned around without a tariff increase, except for inflation adjustments and a 10 percent increase to compensate the utility for a reduction in connection fees. Instead of increasing tariffs, the reforms focused on increasing the number of connections, an effective computerized billing system, improving customer relations and communications, and better incentives and training for staff.[44][35][45]

One factor that partially explains the drastically improved collection rates is a government policy instituted in 1999 of paying the unpaid water bills of public entities. The significant increase in new connections is partially explained by a drastic reduction of connection charges, also in 1999, from USh 400,000/= to 25,000/=.[33] Flexibility in technical requirements (such as waiving land title requirements, easing construction standards, and post-processing of new connection forms) was also key to increasing water service coverage in the urban poor communities.[46] Klaas Schwartz has noted that the success of NWSC since 1998 was facilitated by a high level of support from international donors, international lending agencies, and Uganda's national ministries;[10]: page 93  effective leadership from top management; a highly professional staff; and, strong institutional cultures.[47]

NWSC received ISO 9001:2000 certification for fourteen of its service areas, including Kampala, by June 2008. According to its 2006-07 annual report, NWSC provided training to utilities in Tanzania, Zambi and soon in Nigeria. Building on its success, NWSC's vision was "to be one of the leading water utilities in the world".[48]

Towards the end of 2008, NWSC management introduced another management initiative, codenamed the "Raving Water Fans", aimed at improving customer service and, in the long run, willingness to pay and revenues. The initiative is based on the Raving Fans concept developed by management experts Ken Blanchard and Sheldon Bowles that emphasizes "the 3Ds": deciding what you want, discovering what the customer wants, and delivering plus one percent of what the customer expects.[49]

Legal framework

The current institutional sector framework is based on several policy reforms in the water sector since the mid-1990s. Water supply and sanitation are recognized as key issues under the national PEAP, prepared first in 1997 and revised in 2001 and 2004. The PEAP is the key government document for fighting poverty through rapid economic development and social transformation.[13]

The 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda instructs the Ugandan State to take all practical measures to promote a good water management system at all levels and defines clean and safe water as one of its 29 objectives.[50]

The current legislative water sector framework was introduced with the 1995 Water Statute, which has the following objectives:[51]

  • Promotion of rational water use and management
  • Promotion of the provision of a clean, safe, and sufficient domestic water supply to all people
  • Promotion of the orderly development of water and its use for other purposes, such as irrigation and industrial use, among others, in ways that minimize harmful effects to the environment
  • Pollution control and promotion of safe storage, treatment, discharge, and disposal of waste that may cause water pollution or other threats to the environment and human health.

In accordance with the national constitution, chapter eleven,[50] the Local Government Act of 1997 provides for the decentralization of services, including the operation and maintenance of water facilities for local governments in liaison with the ministries responsible for the sector.[52]

Finally, the National Water Policy (NWP), adopted in 1999, promotes the principles of Integrated Water Resources Management, a comprehensive approach to water supply. In addition, the NWP recognizes the economic value of water, promotes the participation of all stakeholders, including women and the poor, in all stages of water supply and sanitation, and confirms the right of all Ugandans to safe water.[53]

Responsibility for water supply and sanitation

Policy and regulation

The lead agency for formulating national water and sanitation policies, coordinating and regulating the sector is the Ministry of Water and Environment (MWE).[54] The Directorate of Water Development (DWD) under the MWE acts as the executive arm and provides support to local governments and other service providers.[55]

Economic and performance regulation

There is no independent economic regulatory body for water supply. Tariffs are proposed by NWSC and need to be approved by MWE. NWSC is regulated by contract according to a performance contract with the national government. The Performance Review Committee (PRC) under the MWE reviews the performance of NWSC according to the contract. The PRC, however, is partly financed by the NWSC, which may hinder the full independence of the committee.[9]: page 22 

NWSC regulates its local branch offices through internal contracts that are monitored by its internal monitoring and regulation department.[citation needed]

Environmental regulation

Environmental regulation is carried out by the DWD and the National Environment Management Authority.

Drinking water quality regulation

According to Klaas Schwartz, DWD is expected to monitor the quality of drinking water provided by NWSC. In practice, however, NWSC monitors its drinking water quality internally without any complementary external monitoring.[56] NWSC's internal Quality Control Department examines whether the supplied water complies with the national standards for drinking water, which in turn follow the World Health Organization guidelines. There are a central laboratory in Kampala and satellite laboratories in the other NWSC operation areas. At several sampling points, water is controlled for pH, color, turbidity, residue chlorine, and E. coli. The results are available at the official NWSC website and mostly comply with the national standards.[57] Where NWSC does not provide the service, districts are responsible for water quality monitoring. According to the MWE, this is done insufficiently, and data are scarce.[6]

 
A Ugandan girl at a well

Cities and towns

In 22 cities and large towns water supply and sewerage - where it exists - is provided by NWSC, a public utility working on a commercial basis. In 2007, it provided services to 1.8 million people out of 2.5 million in Kampala, Jinja/Lugazi, Entebbe, Tororo, Mbale, Lira, Gulu, Masaka, Mbarara, Kabale, Kasese and Fort Portal, Bushenyi/Ishaka, Soroti Arua, Masindi, Malaba, Iganga, Hoima, and Mubende. The smallest town served, Hoima, had a population of only 9,000. The NWSC operates under the MWE.[58]

Besides its performance contracts with the national government and its internal contracts beginning in 2000, NWSC also had two consecutive service contracts for billing and collection (called "management contracts") with foreign companies in Kampala. The first management contract between NWSC and the German company H.P. Gauff Ingenieure started in July 1998 and ended in June 2001. The second contract with the French company OSUL (Ondeo Services Uganda Limited) ran from February 2002 to February 2004. Under both contracts, NWSC's financial and operational indicators continued to improve. The Boston Institute for Developing Economies, however, has claimed that the improvements were not due to private sector participation, but to overall reforms of NWSC initiated before the service contracts were signed and continued while they were being implemented.[33]

Small towns

In small towns with a population between 5,000 and 30,000, facilities are owned and managed by local governments, supported by the MWE. Many have created Water Authorities, which contract out water services under 3-year contracts to local private operators since about 2000. At the beginning, private participation in small towns faces major challenges such as inexperienced local governments and private operators, limited public spending, and poor user participation.[59]

By 2010, 80 small towns with 35,000 connections were served by private operators. Service quality and user satisfaction have improved after the private operators took over the systems.[10]: page 92  But according to the Association of Private Water Operators, the contracts are too short to compensate the small, local private operators for their initial efforts in setting up their operations.[60] Due to low tariffs and lack of funding for investments the private operators largely failed to expand the water system to connect the poor. Therefore, in 2005 the International Finance Corporation and the Global Partnership on Output-Based Aid (GPOBA) designed a pilot project to provide performance-based subsidies to private operators to expand access to the poor.[61]

Under the Uganda Water Small Towns and Rural Growth Centers project, private operators are eligible for output-based aid (OBA). Up to 55% of the output-based aid subsidies are paid to the private operators during construction, a second payment is made after successful completion and a last payment after successful operation, all verified by an independent technical auditor. The project expands the management contract approach, addressing some of its flaws. Under the project local governments bid out so-called design-build-operate contracts that include investments and have a duration of 5–10 years. It is carried out in Eastern Uganda in 6 small towns with existing piped water systems (Kamuli, Nawanyago, Palisa, Tirinyi, Nankoma and Busembatia) and 4 so-called rural growth centers that do not have piped water systems yet. New household yard taps and public standpoints for about 45,000 poor beneficiaries are planned. GPOBA approved the project in February 2007 and provided a US$3.28 million grant. The project was initially expected to end in February 2010.[62]

As of 2010, competitively awarded contracts had been signed in all ten localities. Four hundred fifty yard taps have been completed and verified so far, serving 8,100 people, with more under construction. The grant financing per capita is lower than under traditional approaches, and in three towns the winning bidder did not even request any subsidy, relying entirely on the expected tariff revenues to recover its investment and operating costs.[61] In one case, a commercial Ugandan bank provided a loan of $100,000 to the winning bidder to finance the construction works.[63]

Local governments in two towns in the Northern Region, devastated by decades of Civil War, tried to apply this approach in 2009. In Kitgum, a town with 55,000 inhabitants, four bids were received and a contract was awarded in the summer of 2009 with a target to more than double the number of connections and water production, and to triple revenues collected without increasing tariffs in three years. In the much smaller town of Pader with 8,500 inhabitants, four bids were received, but none was responsive so that the town council continued to operate the system.[64]

Rural areas

In rural areas, local governments at district levels are responsible for the adequate operation and maintenance of water systems. Responsibility for sanitation promotion and hygiene education in communities and schools is vested in the MWE, the Ministry of Health, and the Ministry of Education and Sports.[3]: page 7 

Other functions

Besides the MWE, several other national ministries play a role in the sector. The Ministry of Finance, Planning and Economic Development coordinates funding and donor support. The Ministry of Local Government is expected to support decentralized government systems, which manage their own water facilities. The Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development is responsible for the promotion of gender-responsive development and community mobilization. The Ministry of Agriculture, Animal Industries and Fisheries oversees water use for irrigation.

Concerning sanitation, the Environmental Health Division under the Ministry of Health is in charge of an integrated sanitation strategy for the country, and the Ministry of Education and Sports is responsible for health, sanitation, and hygiene in schools. All the abovementioned ministries, together with the Ministry of Public Service, development partners, and civil society, form the Water and Sanitation Sector Working Group, which meets quarterly.[65]

Economic efficiency

As described above, the NWSC has substantially improved its operational and financial performance since it was reformed. Indicators show that economic efficiency is also improving in small towns, where the systems are owned by local governments. However, it is difficult to find data on the issue in rural areas.

Non-revenue water

According to the NWSC, the average share of non-revenue water (NRW) in all operating areas of NWSC was 33 percent in 2010/11. While in Kampala, it was 39 percent, and in the other 21 towns, it averaged 17 percent. These values are about the same as in 2006/07.[66] NWSC blamed the high share of NRW in Kampala on the poor condition of the existing infrastructure. To improve the network and thus reduce NRW in Kampala, the Kampala Network Rehabilitation Project was launched in 2002. In 2002–2003, NRW had been 45 percent in Kampala and 27 percent in the remaining areas.[67] Concerning small towns, the MWE in its 2006 sector performance report indicates that NRW decreased slightly from 24 percent in June 2004 to 22 percent in June 2006.[3]: page 23 

There is no agreement on appropriate levels of NRW among professionals. Tynan and Kingdom, however, have proposed a best practice target of 23 percent in developing countries.[68] Except for Kampala, the NRW in large and small Ugandan towns, according to the available figures, were better than the target.

Labor productivity

In 2011, NWSC had 6 employees per 1,000 connections.[66] Back in 1998, there were 36 employees per 1,000 connections.[69] It was significantly reduced to 11 employees in 2003 and 7 in 2007.[70] The MWE indicates an improvement of labor productivity in small towns from 47 employees per 1,000 connections in June 2004 to 28 in June 2006.[3]: page 23  Tynan and Kingdom propose a best practice target of 5 employees per 1,000 connections in developing countries.[68]

Financial aspects

Tariffs and cost recovery

Although Uganda's official policy is to promote tariffs that cover all costs, the NWSC tariff actually covers only operation and maintenance costs. According to a 2003 published report, the second performance contract between the government of Uganda and NWSC provided for a tariff policy that in the long term covered operation, maintenance, and a part of the future investments.[71] Although the current tariff structure does recover operation and maintenance costs, the tariffs are not high enough to finance system expansion, leaving system improvement and extension investments to the national government and international donors. According to UN-Water, full cost recovery tariffs including investments would require a significant rise of tariffs.[10]: pages 82–8  William T. Muhairwe in 2006 asserted that full cost recovery in least developed countries is a myth.[72] According to him, tariffs would have to increase by 90 percent to provide full cost recovery.[73]

In fiscal year 2006–2007, the NWSC tariff for domestic use was US$0.64 per cubic metre. Taken from a public standpipe, the tariff was US$0.42 per cubic metre or less than US$0.01 per jerrycan. The average commercial tariff was US$1.00 per cubic metre.[5][74] For commercial users, a rising block tariff structure was used. A customer who was connected to the sewerage system would pay an additional charge of 75-100 percent. Although water is cheapest at standpipes, UN-Water reports that in this case users usually have to pay the costs of operating a stand tap and thus in the end pay more.[10] A cross subsidy arrangement enables NWSC to keep in operation systems that do not cover operation and maintenance costs.[6]

Investment and financing

The amount of investment needed to reach 95 percent access to water supply in 2015 were estimated at US$100 million per year, only slightly more than the estimated actual investment of $85 million in 2006. About 75 percent of investments were financed through external assistance in 2000.

2006/07 investments

According to the MWE, the total budget for Ugandan water supply and sanitation was USh 149 billion in fiscal year 2006–2007, of which US$73 million were actually spent. This corresponds to US$2.37 per inhabitant.[7] The NWSC received a budget of US$56 million. Out of the remaining funding of US$34 million, 54 percent was allocated to rural water and 29 percent to urban water.[74]

In addition, NGOs and community-based organizations (CBO)s reported investments of US$5 million in 2006,[8] and NGO and CBO members of the UNICEF-supported Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) cluster, which provide emergency water supply and sanitation in the Northern Region, and, reported investments of US$15 million from January 2005 to August 2006.[6][74] Total sector investments in 2006 thus can be estimated at US$85 million.[citation needed]

Investment needs

Because water supply and sanitation are recognized as key elements of the PEAP, the plan provides for long-term investments in the sector with priority to rural areas. The document indicates that in order to reach 95 percent coverage by 2015, from 2001 to 2015 investments of about US$956 million and US$417 million were needed for rural and urban areas, respectively, corresponding to a total of about US$1.008 billion per year or only US$15 million more than current investment levels.[14]

Financing

According to UN-Water, around the year 2000, donor financing accounted for up to 75 percent of the total sector funding. The sector benefited significantly from the Poverty Action Fund under the framework of the PEAP.[10]: pages 26–28  Uganda became the first country to qualify for debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative. According to a 2005 report, debt relief contributed about US$80 million per year to the PAF.[75]

Financing conditions differ between urban and rural areas. In the case of the NWSC, concessional debt contracted from international financial institutions had been passed on by the government to the utility in the form of debt. In February 2008, however, the government agreed to convert the NWSC's USh 153.5 billion debt into equity. This was done to increase the NWSC's ability to borrow from the local capital market. A week later, the NWSC announced that it intended to borrow USh 30 billion more on the bond market to finance mitigation of the impact of Lake Victoria's receding levels on water supply. The NWSC expected to be able to borrow in local currency at lower interest rates and for longer maturities compared to borrowing from commercial banks. The World Bank assisted in structuring the bond issue.[73] The Ugandan Ministry of Finance, however, stopped the bond issue from going ahead, citing the need to first use conventional concessional financing sources.[76]

Concerning rural areas, investments are financed primarily by grants. According to the 2000–2015 Rural Water and Sanitation Strategy and Investment Plan, Uganda's principal investment document for rural water supply and sanitation, financing for the rural sector continued to be provided by external donors, the national government, and NGOs.[77]

Ninety-seven percent of investments in sanitation were funded by external aid. For the period 2010–2015. the government budgeted US$0.4 million for sanitation, corresponding to 0.01 percent of gross domestic product.[17] This compares unfavorably to a commitment by African Water Ministers made at the Africasan conference in 2008 in the eThekwini declaration in which they aspired that budget allocations for sanitation and hygiene "should be a minimum of 0.5% of GDP".[78]

Overall, funding by the national government was expected to increase from 25 percent in 2000 to 75 percent[until when?].[10]: pages 38–57 

External cooperation

Uganda receives external support from several donor agencies. In 2002, a Sector-Wide Approach (SWAp) was adopted for the water and sanitation sector.[3]: page 5  Under the SWAp most development partners have agreed to channel their financing through the national budget. According to a 2006 report by UN-Water, the SWAp has led to the increased confidence of development partners and has proved to be the most appropriate mechanism for resources mobilization and program implementation.[10]: pages 25–27 

Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support

The Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support, which follows a Sector-Wide Approach, is aligned with Uganda's 2004 Poverty Eradication Action Plan. Altogether, US$150 million were to be spent under the program, which started in 2008 and was expected to run for five years. The major development partner involved in the program was the Danish International Development Agency, which alone provided US$66 million. The other partners were the African Development Bank (US$27 million), the Austrian Development Agency (US$19 million), the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (US$14 million), the UK's Department for International Development (US$10 million), the EU (US$9 million), the German Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit, and the GermanKfW (US$6 million). The program aimed to support the achievement of the sector targets. It intended to serve about 1,410,000 people in rural areas, 373,000 people in rural growth centers (RGCs) (communities with a population between 2,000 and 5,000 people[79]), and 155,000 in small towns directly with water and to give them access to basic sanitation and hygiene facilities. Besides the extension of water supply and sanitation in rural areas, RGCs, and small towns, the program included the following components: water resources management, sector program support for capacity building, and sector reforms and water for production.[80]

African Development Fund

In 2005, the African Development Fund decided to contribute US$61 million to the rural water supply and sanitation program. Another US$118 million are provided by the Government of Uganda, and US$39 million are financed by NGOs, several other development partners, and directly by the communities. The program, which lasts for 4 years, aims to rehabilitate existing water supply schemes and provide new ones in rural areas. Furthermore, it seeks to provide new sanitation facilities in public places, schools, and health centers. These physical efforts are accompanied by environmental assessments, mitigation, and monitoring, as well as community development and capacity building. Finally, the program provides for institutional support for the central ministries in order to enable them to efficiently carry out their tasks.[81]

European Union

The European Union contributed €14.75 million to the Mid-Western Towns Water and Sanitation Project. Under the project, which was implemented between 2001 and 2007, water supply and sanitation facilities in the towns of Masindi, Hoima, and Mubende districts were rehabilitated and extended.[82]

World Bank

The World Bank has been active for decades in Uganda.[citation needed] For instance, the bank approved its seventh Poverty Reduction Support Credit in 2008, under which it intended to provide US$200 million from May 2008 to September 2009, supporting Uganda's third Poverty Eradication Action Plan.[83]

Water Supply Project

From 1990 to 1998, the Water Supply Project was carried out under the framework of an urban water program. Its objectives were to improve public health, enable increased production of goods and services, prevent environmental pollution, and ease women's burden through the expansion and improvement of water supply and sanitation facilities. In Kampala, Jinja, Masaka, Mbarara, and Mbare, the project supported physical and institutional components to expand the system and strengthen the NWSC. In addition, water meters were installed to prevent water waste. The World Bank contributed US$60 million to the project.[84]

References

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  2. ^ WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme. 2015. „Progress on Sanitation and Drinking Water: 2015 Update and MDG assessment: 74.
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  25. ^ Fichtner. . Archived from the original on 18 November 2009. Retrieved 16 July 2012.
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  27. ^ Sheba Bamwine; Customer Relations Monitoring. (PDF). NWSC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 July 2014. Retrieved 26 May 2013.
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  33. ^ a b c d Jamma, Yahya; Jones, Leroy (October 2006). "Impact of privatization in Africa: Uganda Water. One of Eight Papers from a Project Entitled: Assessing the Impact of Privatization in Africa" (PDF). Boston Institute for Developing Economies. Retrieved 7 May 2008. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help), p. 3
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  39. ^ Figures from 2004 onwards are from the NWSC Annual Report 2006–2007, 2010-11 and 2011-12. Figures for 1998 and 2000 are from USAID/ARD as well as from Jammal and Jones, p. 17 (the latter for the number of employees).
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  41. ^ The earnings after depreciation and interest show a different picture. They actually declined from 1998 to 2002 after a suspension to service debt was lifted in 1999 and remained negative for many years. In 2004 NWSC posted positive earnings after depreciation and interest for the first time since it began servicing its debt.
  42. ^ In areas outside Kampala NRW was only 18.5% in 2008.
  43. ^ A small portion of this increase can be accounted for by the fact that NWSC took over service in a number of additional towns in this period. 80% of NWSC water sales are in Kampala, Entebbe and Jinja.
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  54. ^ In some sources, mostly dated before 2006, the ministry is called the Ministry of Water, Lands and Environment (MWLE). It appears to have changed its name around that time.
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  68. ^ a b Their proposal was based on a study that used data from 246 water utilities, half of which were in 44 developing countries. The utilities ranged from small ones serving fewer than 125,000 people to large ones serving more than 500,000. All regions and, within countries, all income levels were included. In each of the five categories (NRW, labor productivity, service coverage, water prices, and connection costs and continuity of service), at least 30 utilities from developing countries and 30 from developed countries were included. The best practice targets for developing countries were based on the performance of the top 25 of developing country utilities. The study used data from the World Bank's Water and Sanitation Utilities database and the Asian Development Bank.Tynan, Nicola; Kingdom, Bill (1 April 2002). (PDF). Public Policy Journal. The World Bank Group (242). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2009. Retrieved 19 May 2008.
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Further reading

Adela Barungi (writer), Josephine Kasaija and Paito Obote (editors), Amsalu Negussie (supervisor): New Rules, New Roles: Does PSP Benefit the Poor? Contracts and Commerce in Water Services: The Impact of Private Sector Participation on the Rural Poor in Uganda, WaterAid and Tearfund, 2003

External links

Institutions

  • National Water & Sewerage Corporation (NWSC)
  • Uganda Water and Sanitation NGO Network (UWASNET)

Videos

  • YouTube: Sanitation for all - Uganda. The video describes the sanitary conditions in informal settlements in Kampala and efforts to improve them.

water, supply, sanitation, uganda, ugandan, water, supply, sanitation, sector, made, substantial, progress, urban, areas, from, 1990s, until, least, 2006, with, substantial, increases, coverage, well, operational, commercial, performance, pages, sector, reform. The Ugandan water supply and sanitation sector made substantial progress in urban areas from the mid 1990s until at least 2006 with substantial increases in coverage as well as in operational and commercial performance 9 pages 3 4 Sector reforms from 1998 to 2003 included the commercialization and modernization of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation NWSC operating in cities and larger towns as well as decentralization and private sector participation in small towns 10 page 15 Water supply and sanitation in UgandaDataWater coverage broad definition at least basic sanitation improved sanitation facilities 92 79 in 2015 1 Sanitation coverage broad definition at least basic sanitation improved sanitation 93 19 in 2015 2 Continuity of supply20 24 hours per day in large towns 3 page 58 Average urban water use L person day 44 4 Average urban water and sanitation tariff US m3 0 64 5 Share of household metering99 in large towns 2006 3 page 23 Annual investment in WSSUS 2 37 per capita 6 7 8 Share of external financingMainly external donorsInstitutionsDecentralization to municipalitiesSince 1997 To districts towns and sub counties 3 page 8 National water and sanitation companyNational Water and Sewerage Corporation NWSC in large townsWater and sanitation regulatorNoneResponsibility for policy settingMinistry of Water and EnvironmentSector lawNoneNo of urban service providersn aNo of rural service providersn aThese reforms have attracted significant international attention Thirty eight percent of the population however still had no access to an improved water source in 2010 Concerning access to improved sanitation figures vary widely According to government figures it was 70 percent in rural areas and 81 percent in urban areas 11 while according to the United Nations UN access was only 34 percent 12 The water and sanitation sector was recognized as a key area under the 2004 Poverty Eradication Action Plan PEAP Uganda s main strategy paper to fight poverty 13 A comprehensive expenditure framework was introduced to coordinate financial support by external donors the national government and non governmental organizations 3 page 5 The PEAP estimated that from 2001 to 2015 about US 1 4 billion in total US 92 million per year was needed to increase water supply coverage up to 95 percent 14 Contents 1 Access 2 Service quality 2 1 Continuity of supply 2 2 Drinking water quality 2 3 Wastewater treatment 2 4 Customer satisfaction 3 Water resources 3 1 Overview 3 2 Lake Victoria 4 Water use 5 History and recent developments 5 1 The reform of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation 5 1 1 Description of the reform process 5 1 2 Results and analysis 6 Legal framework 7 Responsibility for water supply and sanitation 7 1 Policy and regulation 7 1 1 Economic and performance regulation 7 1 2 Environmental regulation 7 1 3 Drinking water quality regulation 7 2 Cities and towns 7 3 Small towns 7 4 Rural areas 7 5 Other functions 8 Economic efficiency 8 1 Non revenue water 8 2 Labor productivity 9 Financial aspects 9 1 Tariffs and cost recovery 9 2 Investment and financing 9 2 1 2006 07 investments 9 2 2 Investment needs 9 2 3 Financing 10 External cooperation 10 1 Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support 10 2 African Development Fund 10 3 European Union 10 4 World Bank 10 4 1 Water Supply Project 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External links 13 1 Institutions 13 2 VideosAccess EditIn 2015 around 24 percent of the population lacked access to at least basic water in Uganda Access to at least basic water was 39 percent of the total population or 73 of the urban population and 32 of the rural population Regarding sanitation only 19 of the total population had access to at least basic sanitation or 28 of the urban population and 17 of the rural population Around 31 million people did not have access to at least basic sanitation in 2015 15 16 The Human Rights Measurement Initiative has given Uganda a score of 22 9 with regards to basic sanitation and 9 5 for water supply In earlier years access to improved water had increased from 43 percent in 1990 to 72 percent in 2010 according to estimates by the Joint Monitoring Program for Water Supply and Sanitation JMP of the UN In the same period access to improved sanitation increased slightly from 27 to 34 percent 12 The Water and Environment Sector Performance Report of the Ugandan Ministry of Water and Irrigation however showed markedly different access figures According to this report in 2011 access to safe water was 66 percent while access to improved sanitation was 70 percent in rural areas and 81 percent in urban areas 11 Eighty seven percent of the population lived in rural areas in 2010 12 According to the European Union EU the number of people defecating in the open fell substantially between 2000 and 2008 even though the government provides no subsidies for the construction of latrines 17 According to the JMP s estimates however the number of people defecating in the open declined only from 3 5 million in 2000 to 3 2 million in 2010 11 The reasons for the different assessments are unclear The most common technology options for rural water supply are protected springs boreholes protected wells and gravity flow schemes 10 page 64 Those who do not have access to an improved source of water must rely on unsafe sources such as rivers lakes and unprotected wells One consequence of poor access and quality is that water borne diseases are a major cause of infant mortality 18 Access to functioning water sources varied considerably among districts in 2007 from 12 to 95 percent 6 The national government aimed to reach universal water supply and sanitation coverage in urban areas and 77 percent water supply and 95 percent sanitation coverage by 2015 At the time these goals were set the government defined access to improved water supply and sanitation as follows improved water supply in urban areas is given through an improved water source within a walking distance of 1 5 kilometres 0 93 mi in rural areas and 0 2 kilometres 0 12 mi in urban areas Sanitation coverage is given through sanitation facilities in the place of residence 10 page 12 Service quality EditContinuity of supply Edit According to Maxwell Stamp PLC those who received a piped water supply in 2003 in the nation s capital Kampala were usually supplied continuously for 24 hours per day 19 NWSC however acknowledged that parts of Kampala such as Kyaliwajala Kulambiro and most places on hilltops suffered from chronic water shortages In addition some areas went without water for a week when repairs were undertaken 20 In other towns Maxwell Stamp PLC found in 2003 that most customers were supplied more than five days per week 19 MWE indicated in 2006 that piped water in large towns was usually available for 20 24 hours per day 3 page 58 Drinking water quality Edit Under the fourth Water and Sanitation Sector Performance Assessment based on analyses by several subsectors and NGOs carried out in 2006 it was found that 90 percent and 95 percent of the water samples taken from protected and treated water supplies respectively met national standards for drinking water quality This assessment comprised both rural and urban water supply 21 Wastewater treatment Edit As of 2012 90 percent of the collected wastewater of Kampala was discharged without any treatment NWSC operates a small conventional sewage treatment plant in Kampala and another in Masaka 22 In the case of Kampala the wastewater is discharged into the Nakivubo wetland The wetland is estimated to provide economic benefits of up to US 1 75 million per year removing nutrients from untreated and partially treated wastewater discharged from Kampala through the wetland into Lake Victoria 23 10 page 106 As part of a Sanitation Master Plan for Kampala carried out by Fichtner Consultants with financing from Germany four wastewater treatment plants were planned The plans included a plant with a capacity of 45 000 cubic metres 1 600 000 cu ft per day at Nakivubo a plant with a capacity of 8 000 cubic metres 280 000 cu ft per day at Kinawataka a fecal sludge treatment plant with a capacity of 200 cubic metres 7 100 cu ft per day at Lubigi and another plant at Nalukolongo The plan also foresaw the construction of ecological latrines at schools market places and health centres and hygiene education at schools 24 25 The investments were to be funded by the European Union the World Bank the African Development Bank and Germany The existing plant at Bugolobi was planned to be decommissioned once the new plants became operational 26 In smaller towns NWSC operates 21 sewage stabilization ponds 22 According to the MWE an analysis of municipal effluents carried out in July 2008 revealed that NWSC s wastewater treatment facilities mostly do not meet national standards Out of 223 data sets 12 percent complied with the biochemical oxygen demand standards 26 percent with the phosphorus standards and 40 percent with the total suspended solids standards This leads to the pollution of water bodies from which raw water is extracted 6 In a few cases sewage was disposed directly into the environment without any treatment 10 page 85 The lack of functioning wastewater treatment poses a threat to the environment and human health Customer satisfaction Edit A customer satisfaction survey was carried out in 2009 2010 for all towns served by NWSC It covered questions such as satisfaction with water reliability water pressure water quality timely and accurate water bills responsiveness in resolving complaints responsiveness in effecting new connections customer care and the convenience of the bill payment process Out of 5 319 customers contacted in a stratified sample 2 731 responded Customer care received the highest rating while water quality and pressure received lower but overall good ratings A customer satisfaction index was calculated across all questions showing that 85 percent of customers were satisfied up from 83 percent during the last survey Satisfaction was highest in Hoima Iganda and Masindi at 95 percent and lowest in the central Ugandan town of Mubende where no customer care officer or desk existed at 62 percent In Kampala satisfaction was 83 percent Customers appreciated the ambiance in local offices that phone calls are made to remind customers of payment that customers can settle their arrears through payment plans in exceptional cases and that water cuts are announced through the radio Customers complained about low water pressure muddy water during the wet season supply interruptions during the dry season low water pressure slow implementation of new connections erratic bills disconnection despite having paid their water bills and the rudeness of field staff 27 Water resources Edit Rivers and lakes of Uganda Overview Edit This paragraph needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Water supply and sanitation in Uganda news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message As a whole Uganda has more than enough freshwater Estimates indicate 66 cubic kilometres 16 cu mi of renewable water resources per year which correspond to approximately 2 800 cubic metres 740 000 US gal per person and year The distribution of the resource however is uneven both in spatial and temporal terms Furthermore freshwater is increasingly exploited through population growth urbanization agriculture and industrialization Rivers lakes and wetlands cover about 18 percent of Uganda s total surface including Lake Victoria Africa s largest lake and one of the major sources of the Nile the world s longest river Almost the entire country lies within the Nile drainage basin Rainfall contributes the most to the country s surface water and groundwater The average annual rainfall ranges from 900 millimetres 35 in in the semi arid areas of Kotido to 2 000 millimetres 79 in on the Sese Islands in Lake Victoria 10 pages 38 57 There are no groundwater recharge assessments for Uganda which is why the country s groundwater potential is unknown Regional assessments in Ugandan towns however have indicated that groundwater recharge meets the current abstraction volumes To monitor the quantity and quality of groundwater and surface water the National Water Resources network has been established under the responsibility of the Water Resources Management Department 10 pages 38 57 Lake Victoria Edit Between 2003 and 2006 Lake Victoria lost 75 million cubic meters about 69 percent of its volume but has since recovered to above normal 28 The causes of the decline were disputed According to some reports the 10 15 percent decline in rainfall in the lake s basin caused the lake to lower 29 According to Daniel Kull at the time a hydrologist with the UN s International Strategy for Disaster Reduction in Nairobi the drought would have caused only half the water loss actually seen if two hydroelectric dams at the outlet of the lake into the White Nile had been operated according to the agreed curve determined in a 1953 agreement on the Nile flows between Uganda and Egypt 29 Sandy Stevens Tickodri Togboa professor of engineering mathematics at Makerere University disagreed and calculated that the drought caused 80 to 85 percent of the decline 30 Kampala and Entebbe are supplied with water from Lake Victoria through four treatment plants Ggaba I II and III as well as a recently built plant in Katosi in Mukono District citation needed Water use EditAccording to the PEAP for 2004 5 to 2007 8 water use in rural areas ranged between 12 and 14 liters per person per day L p d In urban towns and centers with a population of more than 5 000 people the PEAP estimated an average consumption of less than 17 L p d The national target is an average consumption of 20 L p d 31 According to the NWSC s annual report the utility s total water production from July 2007 to June 2008 fiscal year 2007 2008 for 23 towns was 63 600 000 cubic metres 2 25 109 cu ft of which 79 percent were produced in Kampala Domestic customers used 46 9 percent or 29 800 000 cubic metres 1 05 109 cu ft of NWSC s total production Divided by the 1 944 741 people whom NWSC served at the end of June 2008 this corresponds to 15 3 cubic metres 540 cu ft per person per year or 44 L p d 4 History and recent developments EditThe first piped water systems were completed during the colonial period in the 1930s Water borne sewerage was introduced after 1937 The construction of new facilities increased from 1950 to 1965 under the framework of large national development programs 32 Later the existing systems were only partly maintained and no new facilities were constructed until 1990 According to a UN Water document by 1990 the urban water infrastructure served less than 10 percent of the population in large towns 10 page 78 Around the end of the 1980s international donors began to invest substantial financial resources to rehabilitate and renew the water network in Kampala 33 For example the World Bank contributed US 60 million under the Water Supply Project which was active from 1990 to 1998 see below 34 Although the financial support helped to rehabilitate the infrastructure the commercial performance of NWSC was still unsatisfactory 33 The reform of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation Edit Description of the reform process Edit The NWSC was created as a government owned parastatal organization in 1972 under the national administration of Idi Amin Dada serving only Entebbe Jinja and the capital city Kampala 35 p 3 Its service area then grew gradually to incorporate large and mid sized towns all over Uganda reaching a total of 23 cities and towns in 2008 and 40 cities and towns in another extension of its service area in February 2014 36 In 1995 37 and 2000 citation needed NWSC was reorganized under the NWSC Statute and NWSC Act giving it substantial operational autonomy and the mandate to operate and provide water and sewerage in areas entrusted to it on a sound commercial and viable basis 37 Internal reforms at NWSC started in 1998 beginning with a Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats SWOT analysis initiated by a new management team At that time the utility benefited from a recently rehabilitated water and sewerage infrastructure including abundant water production capacity and a high level of metering a competent senior management team and a good and enabling water legislative framework providing NWSC with relative autonomy On the other hand NWSC was in bad condition with regard to operational and financial aspects For example non revenue water NRW water which is produced but not billed for several reasons such as leakage and illegal connections stood at 60 percent The utility was heavily overstaffed and staff costs accounted for 64 percent of the total operating costs 35 p 5 In late 1998 the national government appointed William Tsimwa Muhairwe as the managing director of NWSC He had been managing public companies in Uganda and elsewhere Under a new board more emphasis was placed on commercial viability At the same time political interference within the utility was reduced The new management soon drew up several programs to implement the principles the first of which was the 100 days program aiming to adjust operational and financial inefficiencies 9 pages 3 4 Programs to improve financial and operational efficiency of NWSC 9 page 4 Program Objective s Measures Time of implementation100 days program Reverse of operational and financial inefficiencies Improved revenue collection and cost cutting measures February 1999 May 1999Service and revenue enhancement program Restoring customer confidence Introduction of service centers and help desks customer surveys August 1999 August 2000Area and service performance contracts Commercial sustainability Managers were given more autonomy and liability through performance contracts 2000 2003Stretch out program Improving team work More staff involvement flatter hierarchical structure 2002 2003One minute management program Individual performance accountability Incentives for achievements of individual goals 2003Internally delegated area management contracts IDAMCs Increasing autonomy and liability of area managers Internal contracts including explicit targets and incentives Since 2003Since 2000 NWSC has worked under performance contracts with the national government each of which covered three years The contracts contain specific performance indicators which the NWSC is expected to achieve For example the 2003 2006 contract required NWSC to reduce NRW from 39 percent in 2003 to 36 percent in 2006 Simultaneously inactive connections were required to be reduced from 21 to 13 percent To encourage management to achieve the targets an incentive element of 25 percent of the annual basic salary depended on the fulfillment of the contract Each year the NWSC board decides the appropriate bonus rate that the NWSC management receives 38 Results and analysis Edit The improvement of NWSC concerning access and operational performance is indisputable Some of the achievements are Performance indicators for NWSC 1998 2012 39 1997 98 1999 2000 2003 04 2006 07 2007 8 2010 11 2011 12 2012 13 40 Operating profit before depreciation EBDIT USh billion 41 1 5 3 0 11 0 18 0 16 0 30 4 36 1 39 8Non revenue water 42 51 43 38 33 33 33 33 34 Collection efficiency 60 76 98 92 92 96 98 96 Connections 43 51 000 59 000 100 000 181 000 202 000 272 400 296 200 317 300Employees 1784 1454 949 1388 1691 1773 1858Labor productivity Employees 1 000 connections 35 25 9 8 7 6 6NWSC has been turned around without a tariff increase except for inflation adjustments and a 10 percent increase to compensate the utility for a reduction in connection fees Instead of increasing tariffs the reforms focused on increasing the number of connections an effective computerized billing system improving customer relations and communications and better incentives and training for staff 44 35 45 One factor that partially explains the drastically improved collection rates is a government policy instituted in 1999 of paying the unpaid water bills of public entities The significant increase in new connections is partially explained by a drastic reduction of connection charges also in 1999 from USh 400 000 to 25 000 33 Flexibility in technical requirements such as waiving land title requirements easing construction standards and post processing of new connection forms was also key to increasing water service coverage in the urban poor communities 46 Klaas Schwartz has noted that the success of NWSC since 1998 was facilitated by a high level of support from international donors international lending agencies and Uganda s national ministries 10 page 93 effective leadership from top management a highly professional staff and strong institutional cultures 47 NWSC received ISO 9001 2000 certification for fourteen of its service areas including Kampala by June 2008 According to its 2006 07 annual report NWSC provided training to utilities in Tanzania Zambi and soon in Nigeria Building on its success NWSC s vision was to be one of the leading water utilities in the world 48 Towards the end of 2008 NWSC management introduced another management initiative codenamed the Raving Water Fans aimed at improving customer service and in the long run willingness to pay and revenues The initiative is based on the Raving Fans concept developed by management experts Ken Blanchard and Sheldon Bowles that emphasizes the 3Ds deciding what you want discovering what the customer wants and delivering plus one percent of what the customer expects 49 Legal framework EditThe current institutional sector framework is based on several policy reforms in the water sector since the mid 1990s Water supply and sanitation are recognized as key issues under the national PEAP prepared first in 1997 and revised in 2001 and 2004 The PEAP is the key government document for fighting poverty through rapid economic development and social transformation 13 The 1995 Constitution of the Republic of Uganda instructs the Ugandan State to take all practical measures to promote a good water management system at all levels and defines clean and safe water as one of its 29 objectives 50 The current legislative water sector framework was introduced with the 1995 Water Statute which has the following objectives 51 Promotion of rational water use and management Promotion of the provision of a clean safe and sufficient domestic water supply to all people Promotion of the orderly development of water and its use for other purposes such as irrigation and industrial use among others in ways that minimize harmful effects to the environment Pollution control and promotion of safe storage treatment discharge and disposal of waste that may cause water pollution or other threats to the environment and human health In accordance with the national constitution chapter eleven 50 the Local Government Act of 1997 provides for the decentralization of services including the operation and maintenance of water facilities for local governments in liaison with the ministries responsible for the sector 52 Finally the National Water Policy NWP adopted in 1999 promotes the principles of Integrated Water Resources Management a comprehensive approach to water supply In addition the NWP recognizes the economic value of water promotes the participation of all stakeholders including women and the poor in all stages of water supply and sanitation and confirms the right of all Ugandans to safe water 53 Responsibility for water supply and sanitation EditPolicy and regulation Edit The lead agency for formulating national water and sanitation policies coordinating and regulating the sector is the Ministry of Water and Environment MWE 54 The Directorate of Water Development DWD under the MWE acts as the executive arm and provides support to local governments and other service providers 55 Economic and performance regulation Edit There is no independent economic regulatory body for water supply Tariffs are proposed by NWSC and need to be approved by MWE NWSC is regulated by contract according to a performance contract with the national government The Performance Review Committee PRC under the MWE reviews the performance of NWSC according to the contract The PRC however is partly financed by the NWSC which may hinder the full independence of the committee 9 page 22 NWSC regulates its local branch offices through internal contracts that are monitored by its internal monitoring and regulation department citation needed Environmental regulation Edit Environmental regulation is carried out by the DWD and the National Environment Management Authority Drinking water quality regulation Edit According to Klaas Schwartz DWD is expected to monitor the quality of drinking water provided by NWSC In practice however NWSC monitors its drinking water quality internally without any complementary external monitoring 56 NWSC s internal Quality Control Department examines whether the supplied water complies with the national standards for drinking water which in turn follow the World Health Organization guidelines There are a central laboratory in Kampala and satellite laboratories in the other NWSC operation areas At several sampling points water is controlled for pH color turbidity residue chlorine and E coli The results are available at the official NWSC website and mostly comply with the national standards 57 Where NWSC does not provide the service districts are responsible for water quality monitoring According to the MWE this is done insufficiently and data are scarce 6 A Ugandan girl at a well Cities and towns Edit In 22 cities and large towns water supply and sewerage where it exists is provided by NWSC a public utility working on a commercial basis In 2007 it provided services to 1 8 million people out of 2 5 million in Kampala Jinja Lugazi Entebbe Tororo Mbale Lira Gulu Masaka Mbarara Kabale Kasese and Fort Portal Bushenyi Ishaka Soroti Arua Masindi Malaba Iganga Hoima and Mubende The smallest town served Hoima had a population of only 9 000 The NWSC operates under the MWE 58 Besides its performance contracts with the national government and its internal contracts beginning in 2000 NWSC also had two consecutive service contracts for billing and collection called management contracts with foreign companies in Kampala The first management contract between NWSC and the German company H P Gauff Ingenieure started in July 1998 and ended in June 2001 The second contract with the French company OSUL Ondeo Services Uganda Limited ran from February 2002 to February 2004 Under both contracts NWSC s financial and operational indicators continued to improve The Boston Institute for Developing Economies however has claimed that the improvements were not due to private sector participation but to overall reforms of NWSC initiated before the service contracts were signed and continued while they were being implemented 33 Small towns Edit In small towns with a population between 5 000 and 30 000 facilities are owned and managed by local governments supported by the MWE Many have created Water Authorities which contract out water services under 3 year contracts to local private operators since about 2000 At the beginning private participation in small towns faces major challenges such as inexperienced local governments and private operators limited public spending and poor user participation 59 By 2010 80 small towns with 35 000 connections were served by private operators Service quality and user satisfaction have improved after the private operators took over the systems 10 page 92 But according to the Association of Private Water Operators the contracts are too short to compensate the small local private operators for their initial efforts in setting up their operations 60 Due to low tariffs and lack of funding for investments the private operators largely failed to expand the water system to connect the poor Therefore in 2005 the International Finance Corporation and the Global Partnership on Output Based Aid GPOBA designed a pilot project to provide performance based subsidies to private operators to expand access to the poor 61 Under the Uganda Water Small Towns and Rural Growth Centers project private operators are eligible for output based aid OBA Up to 55 of the output based aid subsidies are paid to the private operators during construction a second payment is made after successful completion and a last payment after successful operation all verified by an independent technical auditor The project expands the management contract approach addressing some of its flaws Under the project local governments bid out so called design build operate contracts that include investments and have a duration of 5 10 years It is carried out in Eastern Uganda in 6 small towns with existing piped water systems Kamuli Nawanyago Palisa Tirinyi Nankoma and Busembatia and 4 so called rural growth centers that do not have piped water systems yet New household yard taps and public standpoints for about 45 000 poor beneficiaries are planned GPOBA approved the project in February 2007 and provided a US 3 28 million grant The project was initially expected to end in February 2010 62 As of 2010 competitively awarded contracts had been signed in all ten localities Four hundred fifty yard taps have been completed and verified so far serving 8 100 people with more under construction The grant financing per capita is lower than under traditional approaches and in three towns the winning bidder did not even request any subsidy relying entirely on the expected tariff revenues to recover its investment and operating costs 61 In one case a commercial Ugandan bank provided a loan of 100 000 to the winning bidder to finance the construction works 63 Local governments in two towns in the Northern Region devastated by decades of Civil War tried to apply this approach in 2009 In Kitgum a town with 55 000 inhabitants four bids were received and a contract was awarded in the summer of 2009 with a target to more than double the number of connections and water production and to triple revenues collected without increasing tariffs in three years In the much smaller town of Pader with 8 500 inhabitants four bids were received but none was responsive so that the town council continued to operate the system 64 Rural areas Edit In rural areas local governments at district levels are responsible for the adequate operation and maintenance of water systems Responsibility for sanitation promotion and hygiene education in communities and schools is vested in the MWE the Ministry of Health and the Ministry of Education and Sports 3 page 7 Other functions Edit Besides the MWE several other national ministries play a role in the sector The Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development coordinates funding and donor support The Ministry of Local Government is expected to support decentralized government systems which manage their own water facilities The Ministry of Gender Labour and Social Development is responsible for the promotion of gender responsive development and community mobilization The Ministry of Agriculture Animal Industries and Fisheries oversees water use for irrigation Concerning sanitation the Environmental Health Division under the Ministry of Health is in charge of an integrated sanitation strategy for the country and the Ministry of Education and Sports is responsible for health sanitation and hygiene in schools All the abovementioned ministries together with the Ministry of Public Service development partners and civil society form the Water and Sanitation Sector Working Group which meets quarterly 65 Economic efficiency EditAs described above the NWSC has substantially improved its operational and financial performance since it was reformed Indicators show that economic efficiency is also improving in small towns where the systems are owned by local governments However it is difficult to find data on the issue in rural areas Non revenue water Edit According to the NWSC the average share of non revenue water NRW in all operating areas of NWSC was 33 percent in 2010 11 While in Kampala it was 39 percent and in the other 21 towns it averaged 17 percent These values are about the same as in 2006 07 66 NWSC blamed the high share of NRW in Kampala on the poor condition of the existing infrastructure To improve the network and thus reduce NRW in Kampala the Kampala Network Rehabilitation Project was launched in 2002 In 2002 2003 NRW had been 45 percent in Kampala and 27 percent in the remaining areas 67 Concerning small towns the MWE in its 2006 sector performance report indicates that NRW decreased slightly from 24 percent in June 2004 to 22 percent in June 2006 3 page 23 There is no agreement on appropriate levels of NRW among professionals Tynan and Kingdom however have proposed a best practice target of 23 percent in developing countries 68 Except for Kampala the NRW in large and small Ugandan towns according to the available figures were better than the target Labor productivity Edit In 2011 NWSC had 6 employees per 1 000 connections 66 Back in 1998 there were 36 employees per 1 000 connections 69 It was significantly reduced to 11 employees in 2003 and 7 in 2007 70 The MWE indicates an improvement of labor productivity in small towns from 47 employees per 1 000 connections in June 2004 to 28 in June 2006 3 page 23 Tynan and Kingdom propose a best practice target of 5 employees per 1 000 connections in developing countries 68 Financial aspects EditTariffs and cost recovery Edit Although Uganda s official policy is to promote tariffs that cover all costs the NWSC tariff actually covers only operation and maintenance costs According to a 2003 published report the second performance contract between the government of Uganda and NWSC provided for a tariff policy that in the long term covered operation maintenance and a part of the future investments 71 Although the current tariff structure does recover operation and maintenance costs the tariffs are not high enough to finance system expansion leaving system improvement and extension investments to the national government and international donors According to UN Water full cost recovery tariffs including investments would require a significant rise of tariffs 10 pages 82 8 William T Muhairwe in 2006 asserted that full cost recovery in least developed countries is a myth 72 According to him tariffs would have to increase by 90 percent to provide full cost recovery 73 In fiscal year 2006 2007 the NWSC tariff for domestic use was US 0 64 per cubic metre Taken from a public standpipe the tariff was US 0 42 per cubic metre or less than US 0 01 per jerrycan The average commercial tariff was US 1 00 per cubic metre 5 74 For commercial users a rising block tariff structure was used A customer who was connected to the sewerage system would pay an additional charge of 75 100 percent Although water is cheapest at standpipes UN Water reports that in this case users usually have to pay the costs of operating a stand tap and thus in the end pay more 10 A cross subsidy arrangement enables NWSC to keep in operation systems that do not cover operation and maintenance costs 6 Investment and financing Edit The amount of investment needed to reach 95 percent access to water supply in 2015 were estimated at US 100 million per year only slightly more than the estimated actual investment of 85 million in 2006 About 75 percent of investments were financed through external assistance in 2000 2006 07 investments Edit According to the MWE the total budget for Ugandan water supply and sanitation was USh 149 billion in fiscal year 2006 2007 of which US 73 million were actually spent This corresponds to US 2 37 per inhabitant 7 The NWSC received a budget of US 56 million Out of the remaining funding of US 34 million 54 percent was allocated to rural water and 29 percent to urban water 74 In addition NGOs and community based organizations CBO s reported investments of US 5 million in 2006 8 and NGO and CBO members of the UNICEF supported Water Sanitation and Hygiene WASH cluster which provide emergency water supply and sanitation in the Northern Region and reported investments of US 15 million from January 2005 to August 2006 6 74 Total sector investments in 2006 thus can be estimated at US 85 million citation needed Investment needs Edit Because water supply and sanitation are recognized as key elements of the PEAP the plan provides for long term investments in the sector with priority to rural areas The document indicates that in order to reach 95 percent coverage by 2015 from 2001 to 2015 investments of about US 956 million and US 417 million were needed for rural and urban areas respectively corresponding to a total of about US 1 008 billion per year or only US 15 million more than current investment levels 14 Financing Edit According to UN Water around the year 2000 donor financing accounted for up to 75 percent of the total sector funding The sector benefited significantly from the Poverty Action Fund under the framework of the PEAP 10 pages 26 28 Uganda became the first country to qualify for debt relief under the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries initiative According to a 2005 report debt relief contributed about US 80 million per year to the PAF 75 Financing conditions differ between urban and rural areas In the case of the NWSC concessional debt contracted from international financial institutions had been passed on by the government to the utility in the form of debt In February 2008 however the government agreed to convert the NWSC s USh 153 5 billion debt into equity This was done to increase the NWSC s ability to borrow from the local capital market A week later the NWSC announced that it intended to borrow USh 30 billion more on the bond market to finance mitigation of the impact of Lake Victoria s receding levels on water supply The NWSC expected to be able to borrow in local currency at lower interest rates and for longer maturities compared to borrowing from commercial banks The World Bank assisted in structuring the bond issue 73 The Ugandan Ministry of Finance however stopped the bond issue from going ahead citing the need to first use conventional concessional financing sources 76 Concerning rural areas investments are financed primarily by grants According to the 2000 2015 Rural Water and Sanitation Strategy and Investment Plan Uganda s principal investment document for rural water supply and sanitation financing for the rural sector continued to be provided by external donors the national government and NGOs 77 Ninety seven percent of investments in sanitation were funded by external aid For the period 2010 2015 the government budgeted US 0 4 million for sanitation corresponding to 0 01 percent of gross domestic product 17 This compares unfavorably to a commitment by African Water Ministers made at the Africasan conference in 2008 in the eThekwini declaration in which they aspired that budget allocations for sanitation and hygiene should be a minimum of 0 5 of GDP 78 Overall funding by the national government was expected to increase from 25 percent in 2000 to 75 percent until when 10 pages 38 57 External cooperation EditUganda receives external support from several donor agencies In 2002 a Sector Wide Approach SWAp was adopted for the water and sanitation sector 3 page 5 Under the SWAp most development partners have agreed to channel their financing through the national budget According to a 2006 report by UN Water the SWAp has led to the increased confidence of development partners and has proved to be the most appropriate mechanism for resources mobilization and program implementation 10 pages 25 27 Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support Edit The Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support which follows a Sector Wide Approach is aligned with Uganda s 2004 Poverty Eradication Action Plan Altogether US 150 million were to be spent under the program which started in 2008 and was expected to run for five years The major development partner involved in the program was the Danish International Development Agency which alone provided US 66 million The other partners were the African Development Bank US 27 million the Austrian Development Agency US 19 million the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency US 14 million the UK s Department for International Development US 10 million the EU US 9 million the German Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Technische Zusammenarbeit and the GermanKfW US 6 million The program aimed to support the achievement of the sector targets It intended to serve about 1 410 000 people in rural areas 373 000 people in rural growth centers RGCs communities with a population between 2 000 and 5 000 people 79 and 155 000 in small towns directly with water and to give them access to basic sanitation and hygiene facilities Besides the extension of water supply and sanitation in rural areas RGCs and small towns the program included the following components water resources management sector program support for capacity building and sector reforms and water for production 80 African Development Fund Edit In 2005 the African Development Fund decided to contribute US 61 million to the rural water supply and sanitation program Another US 118 million are provided by the Government of Uganda and US 39 million are financed by NGOs several other development partners and directly by the communities The program which lasts for 4 years aims to rehabilitate existing water supply schemes and provide new ones in rural areas Furthermore it seeks to provide new sanitation facilities in public places schools and health centers These physical efforts are accompanied by environmental assessments mitigation and monitoring as well as community development and capacity building Finally the program provides for institutional support for the central ministries in order to enable them to efficiently carry out their tasks 81 European Union Edit The European Union contributed 14 75 million to the Mid Western Towns Water and Sanitation Project Under the project which was implemented between 2001 and 2007 water supply and sanitation facilities in the towns of Masindi Hoima and Mubende districts were rehabilitated and extended 82 World Bank Edit The World Bank has been active for decades in Uganda citation needed For instance the bank approved its seventh Poverty Reduction Support Credit in 2008 under which it intended to provide US 200 million from May 2008 to September 2009 supporting Uganda s third Poverty Eradication Action Plan 83 Water Supply Project Edit From 1990 to 1998 the Water Supply Project was carried out under the framework of an urban water program Its objectives were to improve public health enable increased production of goods and services prevent environmental pollution and ease women s burden through the expansion and improvement of water supply and sanitation facilities In Kampala Jinja Masaka Mbarara and Mbare the project supported physical and institutional components to expand the system and strengthen the NWSC In addition water meters were installed to prevent water waste The World Bank contributed US 60 million to the project 84 References Edit WHO UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme 2015 Progress on Sanitation and Drinking Water 2015 Update and MDG assessment 75 WHO UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme 2015 Progress on Sanitation and Drinking Water 2015 Update and MDG assessment 74 a b c d e f g h i Ministry of Water and Environment Uganda September 2006 Water and Sanitation Sector Performance Report 2006 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 13 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b National Water and Sewerage Corporation 2007 Annual report 2006 to 2007 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link p 19 23 31 a b National Water and Sewerage Corporation 2007 Annual report 2006 to 2007 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help permanent dead link p 28 a b c d e f Ministry of Water and Environment Uganda 18 April 2008 Sector Performance Report 2007 Executive Summary Archived from the original on 24 July 2011 Retrieved 9 May 2008 a b Uganda s population in 2007 was about 30 9 millionUnited States Department of State April 2008 Uganda 04 08 Retrieved 9 May 2008 a b USh 1 US 0 0005764 31 December 2006 source http oanda com a b c d Mugisha Silver Berg Sanford V November 2006 Struggling State Owned Enterprises NWSC s Turnaround in Uganda SSRN 1088139 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o UN Water World Water Assessment Programme 2006 National Water Development Report Uganda Prepared for 2nd UN World Water Development Report Water a shared responsibility PDF Retrieved 5 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Ministry of Water and Environment 2011 Third Water and Environment Sector Performance Report Archived from the original on 7 October 2011 Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b c World Health Organization UNICEF Joint Monitoring Program Archived from the original on 16 February 2008 Retrieved 16 July 2012 a b Republic of Uganda Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development Poverty Eradication Action Plan 2004 5 2007 8 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help pp 182 188 a b Rural areas US 956 million Urban areas large towns US 281 million and small towns US 136 million Republic of Uganda Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development Poverty Eradication Action Plan 2004 5 2007 8 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help pp 182 183 WASHwatch org Uganda washwatch org Retrieved 22 March 2017 Progress on drinking water sanitation and hygiene 2017 update and SDG baselines Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply and Sanitation World Health Organization amp UNICEF 2017 Archived from the original on 18 April 2014 Retrieved 23 August 2017 a b EU Water Initiative Africa April 2011 Update on EU Aid to Water and Sanitation in Africa Political Briefing Note EU Water Initiative Africa Working Group PDF p 5 Retrieved 23 October 2011 African Development Fund March 2005 Appraisal Report Rural water supply and sanitation program Uganda Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 1 a b Maxwell Stamp PLC 19 August 2003 Poverty Impact Assessment of Privatisation of the Urban Water Sector in Uganda uganda 15 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Daily Monitor 15 February 2011 Water shortage persists in City Retrieved 16 July 2012 permanent dead link WaterAid April 2006 Uganda country strategy 2006 2011 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 8 29 a b National Water and Sewerage Corporation National Water amp Sewerage Corporation iContent Archived from the original on 30 March 2008 Retrieved 8 May 2008 International Union for the Conservation of Nature Nakivubo Swamp Uganda managing natural wetlands for their ecosystem services PDF Case Studies in Wetland Valuation 7 May 2003 Retrieved 2 September 2012 NATIONAL WATER AND SEWERAGE CORPORATION ANNUAL ACTIVITY REPORT JULY 2008 JUNE 2009 JULY 2009 pp 14 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty url help Fichtner Sanitation strategy and master plan for Kampala Uganda Archived from the original on 18 November 2009 Retrieved 16 July 2012 The Daily Monitor 22 March 2011 NWSC to construct four sewage plants Retrieved 16 July 2012 dead link Sheba Bamwine Customer Relations Monitoring Customer Satisfaction Survey July Oct 2010 Survey Findings and Discussions PDF NWSC Archived from the original PDF on 29 July 2014 Retrieved 26 May 2013 Lake Victoria 0314 Height Variations from TOPEX POSEIDON Jason 1 and Jason 2 OSTM Altimetry Foreign Agricultural Service United States Department of Agriculture 23 May 2017 Retrieved 9 June 2017 a b New Scientist Uganda pulls plug on Lake Victoria 9 February 2006 Kull s findings have also been published by the California based environmental lobby group International Rivers Network Tickodri Togboa Sandy Stevens On the Contribution of Victoria Nile River Discharge to the Hydrological Performance of East Africa s Lake Victoria PDF Second International Conference on Advances in Engineering and Technology p 698 Retrieved 5 September 2013 Republic of Uganda Ministry of Finance Planning and Economic Development Poverty Eradication Action Plan 2004 5 2007 8 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 3 November 2011 Retrieved 7 November 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help pp 168 171 Nilsson David 2006 A heritage of unsustainability Reviewing the origin of the large scale water and sanitation system in Kampala Uganda Environment and Urbanization International Institute for Environment and Development 18 2 369 385 doi 10 1177 0956247806069618 a b c d Jamma Yahya Jones Leroy October 2006 Impact of privatization in Africa Uganda Water One of Eight Papers from a Project Entitled Assessing the Impact of Privatization in Africa PDF Boston Institute for Developing Economies Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 3 World Bank Projects Uganda Water Supply Project 02 Retrieved 7 May 2008 a b c Dr Muhairwe William Tsimwa March 2003 Improving performance through internal reforms by the public sector A case of national water and sewerage corporation Uganda Presented for Water Week World Bank PDF Archived from the original PDF on 10 May 2008 Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Water Herald Vol 5 Issue 1 Jan March 2014 NWSC a b Republic of Uganda 1995 National Water and Sewerage Corporation a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help The Republic of Uganda October 2003 Performance contract between the government of the Republic of Uganda and National Water and Sewerage Corporation PDF Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link p 4 10 23 Figures from 2004 onwards are from the NWSC Annual Report 2006 2007 2010 11 and 2011 12 Figures for 1998 and 2000 are from USAID ARD as well as from Jammal and Jones p 17 the latter for the number of employees Government of Uganda Ministry of Water and Environment October 2013 Water and Environment Sector Performance Report 2013 p 83 Retrieved 13 August 2014 The earnings after depreciation and interest show a different picture They actually declined from 1998 to 2002 after a suspension to service debt was lifted in 1999 and remained negative for many years In 2004 NWSC posted positive earnings after depreciation and interest for the first time since it began servicing its debt In areas outside Kampala NRW was only 18 5 in 2008 A small portion of this increase can be accounted for by the fact that NWSC took over service in a number of additional towns in this period 80 of NWSC water sales are in Kampala Entebbe and Jinja USAID ARD Inc 2005 Case Studies of Bankable Water and Sewerage Utilities PDF Retrieved 4 July 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 16 Jammal Yahya Jones Leroy October 2006 Impact of privatization in Africa Uganda Water One of Eight Papers from a Project Entitled Assessing the Impact of Privatization in Africa PDF Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 14 for 1995 NRW value NWSC Annual Report 2006 2007 permanent dead link p 27 Schwartz Klaas 2008 The New Public Management The future for reforms in the African water supply and sanitation sector Utilities Policy 16 1 49 58 doi 10 1016 j jup 2007 07 001 NWSC Annual Report 2006 2007 permanent dead link Ken Blanchard amp Sheldon Bowles Raving Fans A revolutionary Approach to Customer Service 1993 ISBN 0 688 12316 3 a b Republic of Uganda 1995 The Constitution of the Republic of Uganda PDF Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 2 23 Republic of Uganda 14 December 1995 Uganda Water Statute 1995 Statute No 9 of 1995 PDF Uganda Gazette 56 Retrieved 6 May 2008 Republic of Uganda 1997 Local Government Act a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Republic of Uganda Directorate of Water Development National Water Policy a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help In some sources mostly dated before 2006 the ministry is called the Ministry of Water Lands and Environment MWLE It appears to have changed its name around that time African Development Fund March 2005 Appraisal Report Rural water supply and sanitation program Uganda Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 3 Schwartz Klaas 2006 Managing Public Water Utilities An assessment of bureaucratic and New Public Management models in the water supply and sanitation sectors in low and middle income countries PDF UNESCO IHE Institute for Water Education ISBN 978 90 73445 15 4 Archived from the original PDF on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 8 May 2008 p 133 National Water and Sewerage Corporation National Water amp Sewerage Corporation Home Page Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 8 May 2008 Tab gt Water Quality National Water amp Sewerage Corporation Home Page National Water amp Sewerage Corporation Home Page Archived from the original on 21 April 2008 Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help Danert Kerstin Carter Richard C Rwamwanja Ronnie Ssebalu Jamil Carr Graham Kane David 6 November 2003 The private sector in rural water and sanitation services in Uganda understanding the context and developing support strategies Journal of International Development 15 8 1099 1114 doi 10 1002 jid 1053 Global Water Intelligence Taking Ugandan water PPPs to the next level November 2010 p 17 a b Chris Azuba Josses Mugabi and Yogita Mumssen Output Based Aid for Water Supply in Uganda Increasing Access in Small Towns permanent dead link OBA Approaches Note No 35 2010 July 2010 retrieved on 11 March 2012 World Bank OBA in Water Supply in Uganda s Small Towns and Rural Growth Centers Archived from the original on 17 May 2008 Retrieved 5 July 2008 and COWI Output based aid for water supply in Uganda Archived 18 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine and World Bank Project Information Document OBA IFC PPP success stories Uganda Small Scale Infrastructure Provider SSIP Program Water November 2010 John Butler Senior Associate ARD Incorporated Reforming Urban Water Services in Uganda Using Incentive Based Management Contracts to Improve Services in Small Towns 17 December 2009 retrieved on 11 March 2012 African Development Fund March 2005 Appraisal Report Rural water supply and sanitation program Uganda Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 3 4 a b NWSC Annual Report 2011 PDF Retrieved 26 May 2013 National Water and Sewerage Corporation 2007 Annual report 2006 to 2007 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link pp 3 24 25 a b Their proposal was based on a study that used data from 246 water utilities half of which were in 44 developing countries The utilities ranged from small ones serving fewer than 125 000 people to large ones serving more than 500 000 All regions and within countries all income levels were included In each of the five categories NRW labor productivity service coverage water prices and connection costs and continuity of service at least 30 utilities from developing countries and 30 from developed countries were included The best practice targets for developing countries were based on the performance of the top 25 of developing country utilities The study used data from the World Bank s Water and Sanitation Utilities database and the Asian Development Bank Tynan Nicola Kingdom Bill 1 April 2002 A Water Scorecard Setting Performance Targets for Water Utilities PDF Public Policy Journal The World Bank Group 242 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2009 Retrieved 19 May 2008 Mughisha Silver Berg Sanford V Muhairwe William T 2007 Using Internal Incentive Contracts to Improve Water Utility Performance The Case of Uganda s NWSC Water Policy 9 3 271 284 doi 10 2166 wp 2007 010 p 6 National Water and Sewerage Corporation 2007 Annual report 2006 to 2007 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help dead link p 33 The Republic of Uganda 17 October 2003 Performance contract between the Government of the Republic of Uganda and National Water and Sewerage Corporation PDF 21 Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Muhairwe William T 1 December 2006 Cost Recovery Mechanisms The Success of the NWSC Uganda and its Relevancy for Other African Countries Presentation at the Experts meeting on Access to Drinking Water and Sanitation in Africa Paris Archived from the original on 18 March 2009 Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Mbatau wa Ngai 2008 NWSC turns to bond market for financing Daily Monitor dead link a b c USh 1 US 0 0006061 30 June 2007 source oanda com WaterAid May 2005 National water sector assessment Uganda Retrieved 7 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help permanent dead link p 1 Dr William T Muhairwe Managing Director NWSC Uganda Accessing Market Finance The NWSC Experience permanent dead link Presentation at the 2nd Public Private Africa Conference Tunis December 2010 Slide 10 retrieved on 6 April 2012 Rural Water and Sanitation Strategy and Investment Plan 2000 2015 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 29 African Minister s Council on Water 2008 The eThekwini Declaration and AfricaSan Action Plan PDF p 1 Archived from the original PDF on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 23 October 2011 Rural Water and Sanitation Strategy and Investment Plan 2000 2015 PDF Retrieved 8 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help p 17 Republic of Uganda GTZ DED Germany Ministry of Foreign Affairs Denmark Austrian Development Agency Austria African Development Bank European Union Water Facility European Union Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency Sweden Department for International Development UK July 2007 Joint Water and Sanitation Sector Programme Support 2008 2012 Programme Document Retrieved 14 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help African Development Fund March 2005 Appraisal Report Rural water supply and sanitation program Uganda Archived from the original on 10 June 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2008 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help DFID Clean water makes for good living in Uganda 15 October 2009 Archived 13 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine World Bank Uganda Overview Archived from the original on 12 June 2011 Retrieved 14 May 2008 World Bank Projects Uganda Water Supply Project 02 Retrieved 14 May 2008 Further reading EditAdela Barungi writer Josephine Kasaija and Paito Obote editors Amsalu Negussie supervisor New Rules New Roles Does PSP Benefit the Poor Contracts and Commerce in Water Services The Impact of Private Sector Participation on the Rural Poor in Uganda WaterAid and Tearfund 2003External links EditInstitutions Edit National Water amp Sewerage Corporation NWSC Uganda Water and Sanitation NGO Network UWASNET Videos Edit YouTube Sanitation for all Uganda The video describes the sanitary conditions in informal settlements in Kampala and efforts to improve them Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Water supply and sanitation in Uganda amp oldid 1127139626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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