In this second clip, Vida Duti uses the metaphor of a ship on a voyage to explain the challenges faced by the water sector in being able to sustain water services.
Title | Sustainability challenges of the Ghana water sector |
Publication Type | Video |
Year of Publication | 2012 |
Abstract |
Vida Duti, Triple-S Ghana leader, heads a team of ten people who are hosted by the Community Water and Sanitation Agency. In seven short video clips, Vida talks about how the Ghanaian water sector is moving towards sustainable rural water service delivery. |
Full Text | Ghana is one of the learning countries of the Triple-S initiative. What the project seeks to do in Ghana, is to work with the sector to define new ways of making water services more reliable and sustainable so that coverage can be increased and everybody can be reached. What Triple-S has done so far in Ghana is to look at what has already been done in the sector, and assess what has gone well and what could be improved. In this video, Vida refers to the sector as a ship that is on a voyage. There was something in place that was taking the sector towards full coverage, but the ship was basically moving too slow, indicating that there could be something wrong with the ship. However not meaning that the whole ship needs to be thrown away and a new one needs to be bought. And so the work began with carrying out a sector diagnosis. By looking at the ship, see the parts that are working, and the parts that require improvement. The diagnosis of the ship helped to clarify the challenges of the Ghana water sector:
So those were the things that were found to be wrong with the ship and Triple-S is together with the sector now moving into action to refurbish the ship. The end objective for Triple-S is to reduce service downtime, so that people who have had the privilege of getting water facilities will not have to go back to the river to fetch water and that those who in the past haven’t had the opportunity of getting water facilities would get access, so that they will stop walking long distances in search of water. ‘Our objective is that we will have sustainable water services, services that are reliable, to those who already have, and we can also bring the coverage to scale to those who don’t have.’ |