Sustainability
According to Global Water Challenge, sustainability is one of the most pressing issues facing the WASH (water, sanitation, and hygiene) sector today. More than 30 percent of WASH projects fail after two to five years. Resources available to help address this challenge include guidance on operations and maintenance approaches, tools to estimate long-term costs, and other resources to support sustainability.
Browse by resource type
- (-) Remove Project Report filter Project Report
Sustainability Resources
Sustainability of Donor-Assisted Rural Water Supply Projects
Published:
April 1, 1994U.S. Agency for International Development
Few projects in the rural water supply and sanitation (WS&S) sector have achieved full sustainability, according to this study. The study, written to assist in the planning and management of WS&S projects, can also be used by evaluators as a checklist of level of sustainability; it focuses...Read more
Regional focus:
Lesotho, Sub-Saharan AfricaConstraints in Providing Water and Sanitation Services to the Urban Poor
Published:
March 1, 1993U.S. Agency for International Development
The purpose of this report is to specify the key constraints that must be addressed for significant reform in the urban sector to occur. It is meant to be an informational tool, one that helps development planners understand and confront the problems that beset projects striving to bring water and...Read more
Lessons Learned in Water, Sanitation and Health: Thirteen Years of Experience in Developing Countries
Published:
January 1, 1993U.S. Agency for International Development
Twenty lessons learned from the 13 years (1980-1993) of field work in the Water and Sanitation for Health (WASH) project are distilled in this report. in regard to TA, WASH teaches that: effective TA focuses on building local institutions by transferring sustainable skills; an active information...Read more
Institutionalizing Community Management: Processes for Scaling Up
Published:
May 1, 1992U.S. Agency for International Development
The issue of sustainability of water and sanitation projects has emphasized different areas at different times. Initially, the focus of the sector was strictly technical and focused onengineering. At another point, the emphasis was seen as primarily an institutional question. More recently, the...Read more
Don't see what you're looking for? You can search USWP member sites, request a resource, or contact the USWP.