Abstract:
Great effort has been put forth to increase the number of people with access to safe water supply,
adequate sanitation and hygiene in the developing world. Access to safe drinking water supplies,
sanitation services and the sustainability of rural water supplies in Ethiopia are among the lowest
in Sub-Saharan Africa. In addition a number of newly constructed schemes fail to function soon
after handed over to the community for use and thus, holding back coverage from meeting target
plans.
This research therefore aims to assess the technical and management factors that affect the
sustainability of rural water supply schemes in Shashemanne District, West Arsi Zone.
Furthermore, it deals with the institutional, financial, technological and technical factors impacting
sustainability of the schemes, deals with the sustainability analysis for the representative sample of
rural water supply scheme and issues for best practice guidelines for development practitioners to
bring about improved sustainability of the schemes.
Both qualitative and quantitative data were collected besides; reviews of archived document were
carried out. A documentation review was carried out for all available documents regarding water
scheme plans implementation as well as for monitoring and evaluation. Additional information to
supplement the documentation review and to obtain a deeper understanding of the issues was
collected through interviews and discussions conducted with those considered the main
stakeholders. Accordingly, data collection activities were then divided into community (scheme)
and District levels. At community level, FGDs for WASHCO and residents in each user community;
WASHCO resource mapping; and key informant interviews and KAP surveys were conducted. At
District level, institutional resource mapping; institutional mapping/analysis; and interviews and
KAP surveys of the DWMEO were carried out.
Findings show that the District is currently accessed with 30 deep and shallow wells with
distribution, 5 springs with distribution network, 21 springs on spot 20 hand dug wells fitted with
hand pump and 120 water points. The District water coverage is found to be 86% at the year of
2015. In the study area, there is a high rate of scheme failure, with approximately 34% of schemes
not in use. When scheme breakdowns occur, the speed of maintenance is slow. Maintenance on
minor breakdowns is performed within 2 weeks, where as major breakdowns take a minimum of 2
month, at an average of 6 months.
The time taken to fetch water10 min to 5h (roundtrip), with an average of 2h and 15 min; which
exceeded WHO and UAP recommended at 30 min of walking time for a roundtrip, equivalent to a
distance of about 1km and 1.5km radius respectively. Queuing time varies from season to season.
The average roundtrip including waiting time was found to be 5h in the dry season and 2h in the
wet season. The average per capita per day water used found to be 10l
Generally, the findings on sustainability and service levels in Shashemane district reflect a critical
situation. Poor scheme management, poor design and construction quality, poor status of O and M,
feeble links between participatory planning, governance and scheme sustainability. The reliability
of the sources is questionable owing to recurrent drought, annual rain fall drop and ground water
depletion.
Enhance rehabilitation and maintenance of non-functional schemes, Strict follow-up and
supervision during the design and implementation of newly constructed schemes, conserving the
natural resources in order to minimize the groundwater depletion and monitoring the quality of
water supply sources, insure the sustainability of water supply schemes.