Abstract

Uganda was among the first countries in Africa that pioneered Water Safety Plan (WSP) development and implementation, with the first WSP dating back to 2002. The objective of this study was to assess WSP status in Uganda, focusing on the experience of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC), in order to understand the factors that influenced it and strategies for scaling-up. This study consisted of a review of documentation for 20 WSPs, 42 interviews, a focus group discussion and four field visits. Results show that the development of the 20 WSPs over the last 15 years was largely incomplete and diverse. Most of the WSPs focused on system assessment and improvement, but failed to include WSP monitoring, verification and management. The monitoring of control measures was implemented in nine of the 20 systems, while verification took place in the form of internal (5/20) and external (2/20) auditing. The main barriers identified to WSP implementation were inadequate training, team composition and deployment, mistaken perception and inability to evaluate WSP effectiveness. Conversely, the main enabling factors were management commitment, public health responsibility, good customer relations, financial availability and reliable laboratories. These findings suggest a need for more institutionalization of WSPs with improved coordination across stakeholder groups.

Highlights

  • The objective of this study was to evaluate the degree of Water Safety Plan (WSP) development and implementation in Uganda, focusing on the experience of the National Water and Sewerage Corporation (NWSC), to understand the factors that influenced it and strategies for scaling-up

  • Water Association (IWA) that facilitated the creation of an 18-month Water Operators Partnership (WOP) between the NWSC Jinja Area in Uganda, Kisumu Water and Sewerage Company (KIWASCO) in Kenya and the Mwanza Urban Water and Sanitation Authority (MWAUWASA) in Tanzania

  • WSP implementation support was received from the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), which sponsored a consultancy for a review of WSP implementation in three NWSC Areas, namely, Entebbe, Masaka and Mbarara [26]

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Summary

Introduction

Water Safety Plans as a Key Tool for Sustained Safe Drinking Water Access. During the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) period (2000–2015), considerable progress was made, for Goal number 7, target c, which stated: “to halve the proportion of the universal population without sustainable access to clean and safe drinking water and basic sanitation by 2015”. In a bid to address the remaining gaps in drinking water service provision during the post MDG period (2015–2030), Sustainable Development. Goals (SDG) Target 6.1 was set up that aims at achieving universal and equitable access to safe and affordable drinking water for all by 2030. The achievement of this target is measured using

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