Water Supply and Sanitation in Rwanda : Turning Finance into Services for 2015 and Beyond
Author(s)
World BankKeywords
SEWERAGESANITATION FACILITY
TOWN PLANNING
CAPACITY BUILDING
GOOD GOVERNANCE
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
TOILET
INVESTMENT REQUIREMENTS
PROMOTION OF HYGIENE
URBAN GROWTH
SANITATION TECHNOLOGY
OPERATIONAL CAPACITY
DRINKING WATER
URBAN WATER SUPPLY
URBAN WATER
SOLID WASTE COLLECTION
PERFORMANCE CONTRACTS
LATRINES
LATRINE
WATER SCHEMES
WATER SUPPLY SERVICE
RURAL WATER
HOUSEHOLD SANITATION
SCHOOL HYGIENE
SOLID WASTE
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
WATER SECTOR
SANITATION PROGRAM
SERVICE DEVELOPMENT
PRIVATE OPERATORS
HYGIENE BEHAVIOR
NATIONAL WATER POLICY
LOWER LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT
SERVICE DELIVERY
SANITATION FACILITIES
WATER SYSTEMS
WATER RESOURCES
OPERATIONAL COSTS
TOWN
URBAN WATER SERVICES
PUBLIC SANITATION
SAFE WATER
POLLUTION
URBAN DWELLERS
WATER UTILITY
CONSTRUCTION
SANITATION INVESTMENT
HOUSEHOLD CONNECTIONS
WATER SUPPLY SERVICES
SEWERAGE CORPORATION
HYGIENE PROMOTION
CLEAN WATER
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
INVESTMENT PROGRAM
RURAL WATER SCHEMES
NATIONAL WATER
URBAN AREAS
COST RECOVERY
REGULATORY AGENCY
USERS
WATER SUPPLY SYSTEM
URBAN SANITATION
WATER PRICING
HEALTH PROMOTION
WATER QUALITY
SUSTAINABLE SERVICES
URBAN WATER SUPPLY COVERAGE
TARIFF STUDY
RAW WATER SUPPLY
OPERATIONAL PERFORMANCE
TOWNS
SECTORAL POLICY
HOUSEHOLDS
ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
RAW WATER
DOMESTIC HYGIENE
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
WATER SUPPLY SYSTEMS
SEPTIC TANKS
HAND WASHING
COSTS OF WATER SUPPLY
HYGIENE
WATER POLICY
WATER SUPPLY
UTILITIES
RURAL SANITATION
NUMBER OF CONNECTIONS
URBAN WATER SUPPLY SERVICE DELIVERY
COMMUNITY MANAGEMENT
MANAGEMENT OF WATER
SANITATION AUTHORITY
MAINTENANCE COSTS
PUBLIC UTILITY
RURAL WATER SUPPLY
SANITATION SERVICES
QUALITY STANDARDS
SANITATION SECTOR
WATER SERVICES
SUPPLY WATER
SEWERAGE SYSTEMS
INVESTMENT PLANNING
NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION COVERAGE
SANITATION ACCESS
RAINWATER HARVESTING
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12891Abstract
Rwanda has made good progress in extending water supply and sanitation coverage during the past few years, under clear political commitment to three complementary sets of targets: the economic development and poverty reduction strategy (2012), millennium development goals (2015), and vision 2020. The report aims to help countries assess their own service delivery pathways for turning finance into water supply and sanitation services in each of four subsectors: rural and urban water supply, and rural and urban sanitation and hygiene. Rwanda is closing the gap on its targets, but is unlikely to attain the required coverage levels by 2015 without an increase in financing. The coverage trend over the past 10 years for rural water supply demonstrates the country's capacity for developing new projects; while for sanitation the enabling environment and capacity for service development will need to be strengthened further in the medium term. Households' capacity for sharing the costs of water supply capital investments is limited, and the strategy views their main contribution as being towards operations and maintenance costs, through water fees and tariffs. The rural water supply subsector has switched from a community management model, to one of public-private partnership. Nearly 30 percent of rural water schemes are already managed by private operators and the economic and poverty reduction strategy aims for 50 percent by 2012. This second African Ministers' Council on Water (AMCOW) Country Status Overview (CSO2) has been produced in collaboration with the Government of Rwanda and other stakeholders.Date
2013-03-25Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/12891http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12891
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedCollections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Water Supply and Sanitation in Liberia : Turning Finance into Services for 2015 and BeyondWorld Bank (Nairobi, 2011)The African Ministers' Council on
 Water (AMCOW) commissioned the production of a second round
 of Country Status Overviews (CSOs2) to better understands
 what underpins progress in water supply and sanitation and
 what its member governments can do to accelerate that
 progress across countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). AMCOW
 delegated this task to the World Bank's water and
 sanitation program and the African Development Bank who are
 implementing it in close partnership with United Nations
 Children's Fund (UNICEF) and World Health Organization
 (WHO) in over 30 countries across SSA. This CSO2 report has
 been produced in collaboration with the Government of
 Liberia and other stakeholders during 2009-10. The analysis
 aims to help countries assess their own service delivery
 pathways for turning finance into water supply and
 sanitation services in each of four subsectors: rural and
 urban water supply, and rural and urban sanitation, and
 hygiene. The CSO2 analysis has three main components: a
 review of past coverage; a costing model to assess the
 adequacy of future investments; and a scorecard which allows
 diagnosis of particular bottlenecks along the service
 delivery pathway. The CSO2's contribution is to answer
 not only whether past trends and future finance are
 sufficient to meet sector targets, but what specific issues
 need to be addressed to ensure finance is effectively turned
 into accelerated coverage in water supply and sanitation. In
 this spirit, specific priority actions have been identified
 through consultation. A synthesis report, available
 separately, presents best practice and shared learning to
 help realize these priority actions.
-
Sierra Leone : Public Expenditure Review for Water and Sanitation 2002 to 2009Ginneken, Meike van; Bennett, Anthony; Thompson, Darrell (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2014-03-07)This review focuses on how public expenditure translates into the delivery of water supply and sanitation services in rural and urban areas in Sierra Leone. It describes the legal and institutional framework for the allocation of resources assesses access to Water Supply and Sanitation (WSS) services and past sector performance, and analyzes public expenditure in the sector, including the factors affecting the efficiency of use of resources, and makes recommendations. Water supply includes the supply, distribution, and usage of water for drinking, food preparation, and hygiene. Sanitation is defined as the sanitary disposal of liquid waste and the promotion of hygienic practices. The review covers the period from 2002 to 2009, a period of reconstructing after a decade of upheavals. Since 2002, democracy and a stable environment for development have been re-established in the country, especially since the 2007 presidential elections. Sierra Leone remains one of the poorest countries in the world.
-
Turning Finance into Services for the FutureWorld Bank Group (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015-06)From 2012 to 2014 water and sanitation service delivery assessments (SDA) have been carried out in seven selected countries in the East Asia and Pacific region under the guidance of the World Bank’s water and sanitation program and with valuable contributions of other development partners, such as United Nations Childrens Fund (UNICEF), WaterAid, and Asian Development Bank (ADB). Countries where SDA were carried out are Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao Peoples Democratic Republic (PDR), Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Timor-Leste, and Vietnam, while in Myanmar, a broad joint sector assessment took place by World Bank, UNICEF, ADB, and Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA). SDA were implemented as a country-owned process led by key government agencies, and drew on the experience and methodology of similar assessments conducted in more than 40 countries (and states) in Africa, Latin America, and South Asia. It has three main components: a review of past water and sanitation access trends, a costing model to assess the adequacy of anticipated future investments, and a scorecard that allows diagnosis of bottlenecks along the service delivery pathways.