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Welcome
to the RUWASS Website
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| Despite
abundant natural water resources, many urban residents in Uganda do not
have adequate access to safe water and sanitation services, and the
poor incur the highest costs. This is primarily due to limited
financing for the sector, as well as management and governance problems
in urban water supply and sanitation. Population growth and rising
rural-urban migration have exerted additional undue pressure on
inadequate urban facilities, leading to ill-health from
sanitation-related diseases and making it difficult for communities,
institutions and individuals to realize their full economic
potential. |

Public
Water Collection Tap
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In
order to improve the situation, the Government of Uganda (GoU), in
agreement
with stakeholders, embarked on a comprehensive programme of improvement
in services in the urban sub-sector under the overall sector reforms.
In
the above framework, the GTZ supported Reform of the Urban Water Sector
programme commenced in 2002. This project was commissioned with the aim
to support the initiatives by the GoU to develop the Urban Sub-Sector
into an efficient, sustainable, and affordable service to the
population, underscored by sound governance, efficient investment
management, and a cost efficient delivery system. The GoU
wishes
to limit its role to that of policy maker, facilitator and regulator,
thus leaving delivery to the private sector as far as practically
possible. The following sector objectives guide the reform
process and are the basis for the reform programme.
Service
Coverage:– To progressively improve service coverage to
give 100% of the
population access to safe water and appropriate sanitation by 2015, in
line with the maxim “Some
for all, rather than all for some.”
Sustainability:–
To ensure sustainability of service delivery. This includes
the
reduction of government subsidies if they remain necessary, or at least
improving the efficiency of such subsidies. The successful
introduction of Private Sector Participation (PSP) would be a
cornerstone of achieving this goal.
Affordability:–
To ensure that a basic adequate level of service is affordable via
low-cost service delivery and the implementation of a subsidy and
tariff framework which is equitable and beneficial to the poor.
Water
as a Social and Economic good:– It remains an underlying
objective to ensure that water, as a social
and economic good, is managed in the best way, bringing consequent
benefits, infrastructure and economic development, such as health to
the nation.
It is important to note that the reform programme
supports the Ugandan Government initiative of achieving the targets of
the national poverty reduction strategy (PEAP / PRSP) as well as of the
UN Millennium Declaration in the area of water supply and
sanitation. Since the start of the implementation of the
activities under the project, sector reviews have shown significant
improvements in terms of improved safe water coverage and access,
increased reliability of water supplies, performance in billing and
revenue collections, recovery on O&M costs and records by
individual water and sewerage authorities.
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Copyright
2009.
German Technical Cooperation - Ministry of Water & Environment,
Uganda
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