The Limits and Possibilities of Prepaid Water in Urban Africa
This study explores the potential of
prepaid meters for serving urban poor communities. It
provides urban utilities, oversight agencies, and other
stakeholders in Africa with a basis for decision-making on
the suitability, introduction, and management of such
meters. The need for the assessment emerged from prepaid
meters increasingly being utilized by water and sanitation
utilities in developing countries, including World Bank
clients. The technologies adopted have expanded over this
period, but there has been a lack of consolidated data and
analysis that capture the service delivery, operational
efficiency, and access to services aspects of such systems
across utilities and regions systematically. The review
initially aimed to research experiences in six African
countries from the perspective of their communities, as well
as from water sector bodies, governments, and other
investors. The number of case studies was increased to eight
with the addition of Windhoek in Namibia and Nakuru in
Kenya, as it became apparent that they may offer additional
lessons. Windhoek, for example, is one of the prepaid water
pioneers in Africa. The study specifically canvased the
perspectives of customers, including market research and
opinion surveys on people s experience and views of prepaid
water in practice. Women and children were well represented
in many of these groups. The analysis aimed to be robustly
investigative, deliberately not advocating for prepaid
systems in principle, or making firm recommendations, but
rather offering balanced analysis and assessment, and
considerations to inform policymakers and sector leaders, as
well as other stakeholders who may face decisions or
challenges on such systems. One of the key conceptual bases
that the analysis identified was the need to differentiate
between prepaid applications of prepaid system for
standpipes, individual connections, and institutional and
commercial customers each of which have different
implications for their users, as well as for cost
effectiveness. Utilities must be able to justify the
investment in a prepayment system and its opportunity costs
specific to the application they choose, and relative to
alternative means of improving services.
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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: |
Heymans, Christiaan,
Eales, Kathy,
Franceys, Richard |
Format: | Working Paper
biblioteca
|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014-08
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Subjects: | ACCESS TO SERVICES,
ACCESS TO WATER,
ACCOUNTABILITY TO CUSTOMERS,
ADEQUATE WATER,
AFFLUENT,
AFFORDABLE WATER,
ALTERNATIVE WATER,
BLOCK TARIFF,
BLOCK TARIFFS,
BOREHOLES,
BULK METERS,
CASH FLOW,
CASH FLOWS,
CERTIFICATION,
CHEAP WATER,
CHEAPER WATER,
CITY COUNCIL,
CIVIL SOCIETY,
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT,
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT,
COST OF WATER,
COST RECOVERY,
CROSS-SUBSIDIES,
CROSS-SUBSIDIZATION,
CUSTOMER RELATIONS,
DEMAND FOR WATER,
DEMAND MANAGEMENT,
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK,
DOMESTIC CONNECTION,
DOMESTIC CONNECTIONS,
DOMESTIC USERS,
EQUITABLE ACCESS,
FINANCIAL VIABILITY,
FIXED TARIFF,
FLUSH TOILETS,
FREE WATER,
HIGH WATER,
HOUSE CONNECTION,
HOUSE CONNECTIONS,
HOUSEHOLD CONNECTION,
HOUSEHOLDS,
HYGIENE,
INDIVIDUAL CONNECTIONS,
LAUNDRY,
LIFELINE TARIFF,
LIFELINE TARIFFS,
LOCAL AUTHORITIES,
LOW WATER,
LOW WATER PRESSURE,
LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS,
MAINTENANCE COSTS,
METER READING,
METER READINGS,
MOVING PARTS,
MUNICIPAL WATER,
MUNICIPAL WATER DEPARTMENTS,
MUNICIPALITIES,
NATIONAL WATER,
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY,
PAYMENT FOR WATER,
PERFORMANCE DATA,
PERFORMANCE IMPROVEMENTS,
POTABLE WATER,
PRIVATE OPERATORS,
PUBLIC STANDPIPE,
PUBLIC STANDPIPES,
PUBLIC WATER,
PUBLIC WELLS,
RECHARGE,
REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS,
RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS,
SAFE WATER,
SAND,
SANITARY ENGINEER,
SANITATION,
SANITATION PROGRAM,
SANITATION SERVICES,
SANITATION UTILITIES,
SERVICE DELIVERY,
SERVICE IMPROVEMENT,
SERVICE PROVIDER,
SERVICE PROVIDERS,
SERVICE PROVISION,
SMALL PRIVATE PROVIDERS,
SMALL TOWNS,
SUPPLY INTERRUPTIONS,
SUPPLY OF WATER,
SUPPLY WATER,
TARIFF SYSTEM,
TOILETS,
TOWN,
URBAN AREAS,
URBAN CENTERS,
URBAN POPULATIONS,
URBAN SETTLEMENTS,
URBAN UTILITIES,
URBAN WATER,
URBAN WATER SUPPLY,
USERS OF WATER,
UTILITIES,
UTILITIES CORPORATION,
UTILITY STAFF,
VOLUMES OF WATER,
WATER ALLOCATION,
WATER ASSOCIATION,
WATER BILLS,
WATER CONNECTION,
WATER CONNECTIONS,
WATER CONSERVATION,
WATER CONSUMPTION,
WATER CUSTOMERS,
WATER DEMAND,
WATER LOSS,
WATER METER,
WATER METERING,
WATER METERS,
WATER NEEDS,
WATER POINT,
WATER POINTS,
WATER PRESSURE,
WATER PRICES,
WATER SECTOR,
WATER SERVICE,
WATER SERVICE PROVIDERS,
WATER SERVICES,
WATER SOURCES,
WATER SUPPLIES,
WATER SUPPLY,
WATER SUPPLY INTERRUPTIONS,
WATER SYSTEM,
WATER SYSTEMS,
WATER TARIFFS,
WATER USER,
WATER USERS,
WATER UTILITIES,
WATER UTILITY,
WATER VENDORS,
WELLS, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/499021468010486033/The-limits-and-possibilities-of-prepaid-water-in-Urban-Africa-lessons-from-the-field
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26081
|
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