The Business of Water and Sustainable Development
Edited by Jonathan Chenoweth, University of Surrey, UK; and Juliet Bird, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
80% discount on this titleAugust 2005 277 pp 234 x 156 mm
hardback
ISBN 978-1-874719-30-4
£40.00 £8.00
The Johannesburg Plan of Implementation will pose formidable challenges given the predicted growth in global population: by the end of just a decade and half, 6.6 billion people will need to have access to safe drinking water supplies. This is more than the current population of the world. This book illustrates the range of approaches necessary to meet such brave ambitions.
A renewed comittment to improved provision of water and sanitation emerged in the 2002 Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development. Although many of the statements in the Declaration were vaguely worded, making it hard to measure progress or success, the Plan of Implementation of the Summit, agreed by the delegates to the conference, clearly stated that: 'we agree to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of people who are unable to reach or to afford safe drinking water and the proportion of people who do not have access to basic sanitation'.
Given the United Nation's predicted growth in global population from 6.1 billion in 2000 to 7.2 billion by 2015, this commitment will pose formidable challenges. To meet it, by the end of just a decade and half, approximately 6.6 billion people will need to have access to safe drinking water supplies. This is more than the current population of the world, and involves not only maintaining existing levels of supply but also providing new or upgraded services to 1.7 billion people. The challenge for sanitation is equally daunting: 5.8 billion people will need to be serviced, including new access provision for 2.1 billion. Even if these ambitious targets are met, representing a major achievement for the global community, there will still be approximately 650 million people in the world without access to safe drinking water and 1.4 billion without sanitation.
What is clear is the magnitude of the problem facing the international community in terms of water supply and sanitation. Continuation of the status quo and the type of progress made during the 1990s will not permit the Johannesburg targets to be met. Instead it will be necessary to promote a combination of many different, new and innovative approaches, each of which will contribute towards the overall targets. These approaches must include technological advances that identify new sources and improve the quality of those already in use; managerial techniques that increase the efficiency and effectiveness of service delivery at both micro and macro scale; and fiscal approaches that tap into additional financial resources to make improvements affordable.
In the past each of these aspects was seen as primarily the responsibility of government, which supported research into technology, managed supply and disposal systems and provided the funds to pay for them. This view has changed - beginning in the 1980s and increasing in the 1990s with growing moves towards privatisation of many aspects of the water sector. Underpinning this has been a shift away from seeing water as a public good that is essential for life, with subsidised supply provided as part of an overall welfare system, to a more market-oriented approach where the state, although still responsible for maintaining universal access to water services, uses market forces to meet this aim.
The Business of Water and
Sustainable Development aims to illustrate the range of approaches that
will be necessary if the percentage of the global population having access to
adequate and safe water and sanitation is to be increased in line with the brave
assertions from Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development. Some of
approaches will be large-scale 'Western-style' improvements involving the
creation of new business models, their effectiveness assessed by traditional
approaches of fiscal and social analysis. Such schemes may be instigated and
partly funded by governments, but are increasingly turning to the private sector
for money and expertise. In contrast, many smaller communities would be better
served by following another path to improved water supply and sanitation.
Because of their size, location or traditions they may achieve better results
through the adoption of local small-scale solutions. Non-governmental
organisations have been very active in this area, but to extend their operations
many are seeking to adopt a more business-like model. All water supply and waste
disposal agencies, large or small, need to support and encourage continued
research into technological solutions that seek out better, more sustainable
ways to use our increasingly scarce supplies of good-quality fresh
water.
...The Business of Water and Sustainable Development ... ranges over many issues such as smart metering, ecological sanitation in developing countries, demand management and water pricing. There are five parts: 1. General theory; 2. Privatization; 3. Technology and regionally focussed case studies; 4. on the rural environment; and 5. on the urban environment.
The first part on theory discusses what is perhaps the most thorny issue relating to water: whether it is a good or a right. Should water be free? The answer the book provides is No stating that such a right would be worthless when the river runs dry.
The five chapters under the part on privatization show no clear cut agreement for and against but conclude that the private sector has significant role to play and that the negative effects of private sector involvement need to be carefully managed.
The part on technology has chapters on geothermal energy for desalination, dry sanitation options, water metering and water for isolated communities. Broken hand pumps litter South Africa because the local population cannot repair and maintain them. Sustainable technology means the local communities must be able to maintain equipment. Low tech solutions are just as important as high tech solutions.
The part on case studies discusses how important it is to deal with social systems and agricultural reforms. For example, certain crop species in Mediterranean areas require too much water for irrigation and should not be subsidized.
Reasonable access to basic safe water is defined by the World Health Organization as 20 litres of clean water per capita from a source within 1 km. of the person's home. The editors, Jonathan Chenoweth and Juliet Bird have attempted to show how meeting the Millennium Declaration of the UN General Assembly (2000) to halve the proportion of people with no access to safe drinking water can be met
The Gallon Environment Letter Vol. 10 No. 17 (3 October 2005)
Introduction
Jonathan Chenoweth, University of Surrey, UK, and Juliet Bird, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
1. Incorporating demand-side information into water utility operations and planning
Steven Renzetti, Brock University, Canada
2. The price of water: separating the natural from the optimal in water supply—ensuring the broadest community access to safe water
Daniel Terrill, ACIL Tasman, Australia
3. Balancing the cost implications and benefits of compliance with advanced risk analysis
Davide Bixio, Chris Thoeye and Greet De Gueldre, Aquafin NV, Belgium
4. Environmental management with the balanced scorecard: a case study of the Berlin Water Company, Germany
Carl-Ulrich Gminder, Institute for Economy and the Environment, Switzerland
5. The private sector and service extension
David Lloyd Owen, Envisager, UK
6. Private-sector participation in water and sanitation reviewed: insights from new institutional economics
Dieter Rothenberger and Bernhard Truffer, Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental Science and Technology, Switzerland
Read abstract
7. Ownership and performance of water utilities
Steven Renzetti and Diane Dupont, Brock University, Canada
Read abstract
8. The involvement of the private sector in water servicing: effects on the urban poor in the case of Aguascalientes, Mexico
Leslie Morris, Consultant, Canada, and Luis Fernando Gallardo Cabrera, IMPLAN, Mexico
Read abstract
9. Joint-use municipal–industrial infrastructure: an innovative approach to expanding urban water services in the developing world
Jennifer Bremer, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA, and Steven Nebiker, Hydrologics Inc., USA
10. Autonomous water supply of a remote island community: the case of geothermal water desalination on Milos, Greece
Thomas Nowak, Heinrich-Heine-University Düsseldorf, Germany
11. Ecological sanitation: reaching for the MDGs
Mayling Simpson-Hebert, Catholic Relief Services, Regional Office, Kenya, Arno Rosemarin, Stockholm Environment Institute, Sweden, and Uno Winblad, Kyoto University, Japan
12. A measured step toward sustainability for rural water supply: one metering strategy that works
Eric Johnson, Aquasanitas, USA
13. Sustainable water supply for a remote rural community in Mozambique: Oxfam Australia and the Chicomo Rural Development Project
Elizabeth Mann, Oxfam Australia
Read abstract
14. Indigenous people, women and water: the importance of local knowledge for project planning in an African context
Fenda A. Akiwumi, Texas State University, USA
Read abstract
15. The commitment of the chlorine industry to sustainable societies: a partnership case study in Guatemala
C.T. ‘Kip’ Howlett Jr, Chlorine Chemistry Council, USA
16. Water-pricing policies and the Water Framework Directive 2000/60/EC: a first approach concerning the agricultural sector in the Axios River Basin
Konstantinos Sarantakos and Elias Dimitriou, Institute of Inland Waters, Greece, and Areti Kontogianni and Michalis Skourtos, University of the Aegean, Greece
17. Reducing water and sanitation backlogs in rural areas: Umgeni Water’s response as an implementing agent within KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
David A. Stephen, Umgeni Water, South Africa
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18. The demand-side versus the supply-side approach: the case for sustainable management of water supply in developing countries
Lingappan Venkatachalam, Institute for Social and Economic Change, India
19. Water supply in Singapore: challenges and choices
Kim Chuan Goh, National Institute of Education, Singapore
Read abstract
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Jonathan L. Chenoweth is a lecturer in the Centre for Environmental Strategy, University of Surrey, UK. He graduated from the University of Melbourne in 2000 with a PhD that examined institutional structures for the management of the Murray-Darling and Mekong River Basins. He has conducted research in Australia, South-East Asia, the Middle East and Europe in the areas of environmental policy and water resources management. |
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Juliet Bird is a graduate of the Universities of London and Melbourne. For much of her career she was at the Melbourne College of Education, where she lectured in Geography and Environmental Science. Later she transferred to the Department of Geography at the University of Melbourne, where she lectured in water resources management. She was a member of the Cooperative Research Centre for Catchment Management and a consultant on river and water management. She is now a Fellow of the Department of Geography, and chairs the Landscape Committee of the National Trust of Australia (Victoria). |


