Abstract

Abstract. In the rural areas of the developing countries, the access to water supply and sanitation services is still largely inadequate. Poor governance of the water sector is frequently singled out as a cause and reforms are required. Studies analyzing the great diversity of restructuring efforts currently being undertaken in the water sector have not succeeded in determining the most appropriate institutional and economic framework for such reforms. Moreover they underline the lack of documentation on actual projects and call for concrete models and tools for improving water and sanitation services (WSS) and for adapting water utility practice to real conditions. In this context, the Vida no Vale (Life in the Valley) project is aimed at bringing universal access to WSS for all inhabitants of both urban and rural areas, in the north-eastern area of the Brazilian State of Minas Gerais. The project takes sustainable development as its guiding principle, and relies on the joint implementation of an innovative technical design, a governance model involving public participation and subsidiarity, and an economic structure combining financial viability and social equity. Designed at a consistent geographical and hydrological scale, it includes the creation of a regional subsidiary of the existing state water company as a keystone element. The institutional organisation also relies on the creation of a public board consisting of the 92 municipalities of the project region and of the State of Minas Gerais. This board will be in charge of the system's governance. This paper presents the first step of the project (2006), consisting of a feasibility study and the implementation of 9 pilot sub-projects. During the feasibility study, the supply, demand and capacity to pay for water services were defined, existing infrastructure appraised, the necessary amount of investment assessed and an innovative operational model and a sustainable management system, including civil society participation, defined. The main features of the Vida no Vale project have been tested in 9 pilot sub-projects, and implemented in municipalities chosen for their low Human Development Index and for the lack of WSS, in both urban and rural areas. A second phase corresponding to the project's final implementation will run from 2007 to 2011. The Vida no Vale project design resulted in a logical and extensive framework which could be used for developing similar WSS projects in other poor, rural regions, its adaptiveness being a key feature for taking into account the specific, local conditions.

Highlights

  • Access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation is necessary for creating the essential conditions for improved living standards and sustainable socio-economic development

  • In Brazil, it has been shown that water supply and basic sanitation services, such as the connection of households to running water and sewage services, were important factors in explaining infant mortality rates (Alves and Belluzzo, 2004)

  • In adopting the Millennium Development Goals (United Nations, 2000), signatory countries pledged to halve the proportion of people without access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation by 2015

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Summary

Introduction

Access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation is necessary for creating the essential conditions for improved living standards and sustainable socio-economic development This is especially important for reducing child mortality and morbidity (UNICEF, 2006). It is very important to implement WSS projects and in parallel, to start a learning process aimed at better quantifying the actual costs and at testing the territorial solutions (Kauark-Leite, 2005) In this context, the main objective of the Vida no Vale project is to bring universal access to sanitation and water for the whole population of the region, inhabitants of both urban and rural areas alike. The project, coordinated by SEPLAG (Secretaria de Estado de Planejamento e Gestao, Minas Gerais’ Secretariat of State for Planning and Management) and COPASA (Companhia de Saneamento de Minas Gerais, a mixed economy company, of which the State of Minas Gerais is the main shareholder), constitutes one of the most ambitious projects within the framework programme Mais saude para todos (More health for everybody) of the Minas Gerais government

The project area
WSS in Brazil
WSS in the project area
The guiding principles of the project Vida no Vale
The project structure
The feasibility study
The supply and demand of WSS
The WSS diagnosis
The new system design
The pilot sub-projects
Research objectives corresponding to the project evaluation process
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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