Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs

Rural water coverage in Ghana is on the increase, yet there are real concerns about the level of service received and sustainability of water supply systems. One of the reasons is the lack of systematic maintenance because of inadequate funding and unreliable cash flow for Capital Maintenance Expend...

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Main Author: Tyhra C. Kumasi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SDEWES Centre 2018-09-01
Series:Journal of Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.sdewes.org/jsdewes/pid6.0195
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spelling doaj-9f21245f2bf245ff8096b3e5877be1212020-11-25T00:42:35ZengSDEWES CentreJournal of Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems1848-92572018-09-016342744510.13044/j.sdewes.d6.019500195Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and NeedsTyhra C. Kumasi0 Community Water and Sanitation Agency, Head Office, PMB-KIA, Accra, Ghana Rural water coverage in Ghana is on the increase, yet there are real concerns about the level of service received and sustainability of water supply systems. One of the reasons is the lack of systematic maintenance because of inadequate funding and unreliable cash flow for Capital Maintenance Expenditure. This paper highlights the current gaps and needs of water management models in three districts using focus group discussion and key informant interviews to collect qualitative and quantitative data. The study revealed that the mechanism inherent in the National Community Water and Sanitation Strategy for addressing Capital Maintenance Expenditure works for systems that have been implementing it. Limited capacity and weak management characterize water systems with inadequate mechanism to address Capital Maintenance. Results showed limited awareness and application of water sector guidelines for the management of the piped systems by the management models and the districts. This paper contributes to the literature on funding mechanisms for small town systems sustainable water delivery in Ghana. The study concludes that to effectively address sustainable water delivery in small town systems, governance, operations and financial management regimes in line with the water sector guidelines are critical to bring about the necessary change in the management models. This calls for stronger supervisory and oversight responsibilities from Community Water and Sanitation Agency and the District Assemblies. http://www.sdewes.org/jsdewes/pid6.0195 Capital maintenance expenditureGhanaManagement modelsService deliveryWater and sanitation management teamsGovernanceOperationsFinancial management.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tyhra C. Kumasi
spellingShingle Tyhra C. Kumasi
Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
Journal of Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems
Capital maintenance expenditure
Ghana
Management models
Service delivery
Water and sanitation management teams
Governance
Operations
Financial management.
author_facet Tyhra C. Kumasi
author_sort Tyhra C. Kumasi
title Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
title_short Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
title_full Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
title_fullStr Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
title_full_unstemmed Financing Sustainable Water Service Delivery of Small Town Water Systems in Ghana: The Gaps and Needs
title_sort financing sustainable water service delivery of small town water systems in ghana: the gaps and needs
publisher SDEWES Centre
series Journal of Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems
issn 1848-9257
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Rural water coverage in Ghana is on the increase, yet there are real concerns about the level of service received and sustainability of water supply systems. One of the reasons is the lack of systematic maintenance because of inadequate funding and unreliable cash flow for Capital Maintenance Expenditure. This paper highlights the current gaps and needs of water management models in three districts using focus group discussion and key informant interviews to collect qualitative and quantitative data. The study revealed that the mechanism inherent in the National Community Water and Sanitation Strategy for addressing Capital Maintenance Expenditure works for systems that have been implementing it. Limited capacity and weak management characterize water systems with inadequate mechanism to address Capital Maintenance. Results showed limited awareness and application of water sector guidelines for the management of the piped systems by the management models and the districts. This paper contributes to the literature on funding mechanisms for small town systems sustainable water delivery in Ghana. The study concludes that to effectively address sustainable water delivery in small town systems, governance, operations and financial management regimes in line with the water sector guidelines are critical to bring about the necessary change in the management models. This calls for stronger supervisory and oversight responsibilities from Community Water and Sanitation Agency and the District Assemblies.
topic Capital maintenance expenditure
Ghana
Management models
Service delivery
Water and sanitation management teams
Governance
Operations
Financial management.
url http://www.sdewes.org/jsdewes/pid6.0195
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