Activating the urban on-site sanitation market with new technology Various documents on results from research grant Narracott, A. (2013)

This library entry contains background documents for a grant that Andy Narracott is leading and which is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Further information and a discussion is available on the SuSanA discussion Forum, see link below. Short description of the project: This grant will support a four year program aimed at using new sanitation technologies to activate and expand the sanitation market in four cities in Africa and South Asia. Last year, the Foundation put sanitation on the map when it issued a challenge to design toilets that can capture and process human waste without piped water, sewer or electrical connections, and transform human waste into useful resources, such as energy and water, at an affordable price. WSUP believes that great technology is only the beginning. For technology to translate into improved services, we need a deep understanding of the users and markets in which the technology will operate, as we need supportive and strong local institutions. The project will prime the market for the rapid uptake of sanitation services and create the enabling environment for the market based scale-up of new and innovative sanitation options and service models which will make a significant contribution to the growing challenge of urban sanitation. Goal: The goal of the project is to significantly improve on-site sanitation services being delivered in four locations in the developing world. The aim for an ‘excellent’ outcome of this project is at least 10% of the city wide on-site sanitation market in each location, an estimated 375,000 people, accessing improved services at a cost of $0.05 per consumer per day or less, lower costs and higher margins for faecal sludge management (FSM) operators and on-going investment for service expansion in each location by October 2016. Objectives: The program has four sub objectives: 1. Establish a technology-independent working value chain and a supportive institutional environment 2. To utilise new designs of latrine to activate the on-site sanitation market at city scale in Rangpur, Bangladesh & a secondary town in the Rift Valley, Kenya (TBC in design phase) 3. To utilise new pit emptying technology to activate the on-site sanitation market at city scale in Lusaka, Zambia 4. To utilise a new sludge treatment process, from the Foundation's pipeline, or elsewhere, to activate the on-site sanitation market at city scale in Kumasi, Ghana +++++++++++ Documents available for download below: - none available yet, please check back later

Bibliographic information

Narracott, A. (2013). Activating the urban on-site sanitation market with new technology Various documents on results from research grant Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor (WSUP), London

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Faecal sludge treatment processesFundamental research and engineeringUrban (entire city)English

Related Countries

BangladeshGhanaKenyaZambia

Activating the urban on-site sanitation market with new technology

Published in: 2013
Pages: 0

Publisher:
Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor (WSUP), London

Author(s):
Narracott, A.

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