Abstract

The fundamental importance of groundwater for urban drinking water supplies in sub-Saharan Africa is increasingly recognised. However, little is known about the trends in urban groundwater development by individual households and its role in securing safely-managed drinking water supplies. Anecdotal evidence indicates a thriving self-supply movement to exploit groundwater in some urban sub-Saharan African settings, but empirical evidence, or analysis of the benefits and drawbacks, remains sparse. Through a detailed analysis of official datasets for Lagos State, Nigeria we examine the crucial role played by groundwater and, specifically, by household self-supply for domestic water provision. We then set this in the context of Nigeria and of sub-Saharan Africa. One of the novelties of this multi-scalar approach is that it provides a granular understanding from large-scale datasets. Our analysis confirms the importance of non-piped water supplies in meeting current and future drinking water demand by households in parts of sub-Saharan Africa and the role played, through self-supply, by groundwater. Our results demonstrate inconsistencies between datasets, and we make recommendations for the future. We argue that a key actor in the provision of drinking water supplies, the individual household, is largely overlooked by officially reported data, with implications for both policy and practice.

Highlights

  • Sustainable Development Goal 6.1 aims to achieve universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030

  • In this paper we examine the extent to which existing datasets that are used by the Joint Monitoring Programme (JMP) can inform estimates of groundwater dependency for urban populations in sub-Saharan Africa, and the role of self-supply practices

  • In order to visualise trends, moving average trendlines have been plotted for all data sets that have at least two data points, i.e., Census (CEN), MICS, Demographic and Health Survey (DHS), General Household Survey (GHS), Performance Monitoring for Action (PMA) and Malaria Indicators

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainable Development Goal 6.1 aims to achieve universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030. Economic growth, increasing urbanisation, and rising urban populations, coupled with growing user demands and industrialisation, is resulting in demands outpacing piped supplies in many towns and cities [3]. This maintains a past pattern of declining access to piped water in cities across Africa [4]. The role of water vendors has long been recognised, but households turn to other non-piped supplies, including commissioning the construction of their own boreholes, both for drinking water and other household uses [6,7,8] Where these supplies are located on household premises, they can contribute to securing safely managed water supplies. Described as a ‘hidden’ or ‘invisible’ resource [9,10,11]

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