AF1. Develop and implement sanitation and water plans to bring back on track the neglected areas including post conflict countries, informal settlements and slums, rural communities, and small towns by 2015.
Solutions
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Capacity Building of Local/National WASH NGOs/CBOs in Africa (Cap-WASH Program)
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Adduction d’eau potable (AEP) pour alimenter le village de brousse de Sakalalina à Madagascar
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Sanitation Master Planning Process as a Framework for Coordinated Donor Investments
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Using Life-Cycle Cost Approach to understand the real costs of rural water supply operation and maintenance (South Africa)
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Manual well drilling to reduce borehole cost in Senegal
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WATASOL, as a technology, and a methodology, to produce chlorine locally, so that communities can have access to safe water.
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Program for the structuring of the fecal sludge market for the benefit of poor households in Dakar slums, Senegal.
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Managing Water for African Cities(WAC)
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Promoting Public-Private Partnership (PPPs) in Rwanda’s Rural Water Supply
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African Think Tank on Home-Grown WASH solutions
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Strategy for waste reduction, job creation and income generation in the slums of Ouagadougou city, Burkina Faso.
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INTEGRATED WATER SUPPLY AND PROMOTION OF HEALTH AND ENVIRONMENTAL SANITATION: PRIVATE NETWORK CONNECTIONS FOR DRINKING WATER THROUGH MICROCREDIT.
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Innovative Business Models for the Scale-Up of Urban Sanitation Service Delivery in Africa
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SMART Centres providing essential support services for mainstreaming WASH self supply in Africa
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Delegated management of the water supply service in unplanned peri-urban settlements.
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Stratégie communale de maintenance et de réparation des forages équipés de pompes manuelles
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Making Basic Water Services happen – The South African experience in achieving the water MDG.
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Projet pilote d’assainissement écologique rural à Dayet Ifrah – Province d’ifrane Maroc
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From national to local sanitation planning in Burkina
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Strategy for access to water and sanitation in the informal settlements : the delegated master operator model
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South Africa’s experience of integrating water access as a Human Right
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Assainissement semi collectif
Linked priorities
Commitments
No commitments







The heritage of indigenous includes infrastructure for the supply, processing, distribution and water treatment. It is therefore imperative that the infrastructure remains in public ownership as the control of water services.
Municipalities of cities around the world will have to implement the infrastructure networks of water and sewer to meet the needs of urbanization. Today, some facilities have reached their useful life and others must be replaced because material and soil conditions that have accelerated aging.
Sustainability of infrastructure water treatment and wastewater treatment is also based on improved management practices in this area, particularly with regard to knowledge of the costs of water, use of new technologies and as a more economical use of water.
To ensure the continuity of this heritage, the development and implementation by municipalities of a plan of intervention will be required.
This plan will be used to optimize the management of water services to maintain and even improve the quality of services offered.
In addition, the response plan will allow municipalities to establish priorities for the work required each year and will provide sufficient funding for infrastructure projects. The government intends to maintain its financial assistance to municipalities so that they can fulfill their responsibilities for water services.
However, governments will require gradually, by 2015, the filing of a response plan before considering an application for funding through municipal infrastructure programs.
Naulin. Thanks for your advice. Can you tell us what does your institution “Banque Agricole Gabonaise” do related to water problems in Gabon?