Key issues
- Waste discharge into water bodies
- Inadequate hygiene
- Political will and poor planning
- Lack of awareness and qualified people
- Inadequate infrastructure for population growth.
Recommendations
- Research/assessment/study of problems needed.
- Policies, regulation and implementation is needed. There are many policies continuously being developed but implementation usually does not follow.
- Increase awareness of the importance of planning ahead.
- Critically important to make decisions with evidence/scientific information.
- Water quality must be tied to water treatment and re-use.
Discussion Points
- Women and young girls are most affected by water quality issues.
- Political will is essential to getting regulation of water quality some countries are getting it right: Botswana, Uganda
- Water is not a high priority in most government ministries; many women are managers of water but they lack funding.
- Involvement of women in the design, implementation, infrastructure building etc. is needed.
- It is critical to have the right people with the right technical background in the ministries / municipalities
- Management of services is lacking/underfunded; a lot of the management is information management and is not a source of revenue.
- Water pollution is the major cause of low water quality and hence there is need to address sources of major polluters
- Implementation is the challenge still; plans are in place but are not implemented
- African women are important in keeping politicians in office.
- Waste management drives water quality control (Model of peace-keeping Mission in Darfur which is a water-conflict zone).