Building Effective Drinking Water Management Policies in Rural Africa

CIGI-Africa Initiative Policy Brief No. 5

September 12, 2012

The importance of providing clean, safe drinking water and sanitation to rural inhabitants of developing countries is widely recognized; inadequate access to safe drinking water and sanitation has direct and immediate consequences for quality of life, food security, long-term socio-economic development and the eradication of poverty.

Much of the literature on the quality of Africa’s drinking water is based on very limited field and laboratory tests and there is little data derived from rigorous, empirical studies on water quality. In this well-researched policy brief and discussion paper, Christopher Opio, associate professor in the Ecosystem Science and Management Program at the University of Northern British Columbia and president of the Northern Uganda Development Foundation, offers practical policy recommendations for keeping the drinking water in rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa clean and safe on a sustained basis. These recommendations are based on insights gained from field research in rural Uganda, where empirical testing was conducted on water samples from bore wells and storage containers in private households. Because bore wells and household storage are common in rural Sub-Saharan Africa, these recommendations are applicable across national jurisdictions, and address the role policy makers, NGOs and individual well users can play in keeping water clean and safe.

Part of Series

CIGI-Africa Initiative Policy Brief Series

The CIGI-Africa Initiative Policy Brief Series presents analysis and commentary emerging from field-based research on issues critical to the continent. Findings and recommendations in this peer-reviewed series aim to inform policy making and to contribute to the overall African research enterprise.

About the Author

Christopher Opio is an associate professor in the Ecosystem Science and Management Program at the University of Northern British Columbia.