Category Archives: Senegal

Senegal: behavioral determinants of handwashing with soap – emergent learning

A new Water and Sanitation Program (WSP) Learning Note found that beliefs and ease of access to soap and water were correlated with handwashing with soap behaviors for given proxy measures among mothers and caretakers in Peru and Senegal.

“Behavioral Determinants of Handwashing with Soap Among Mothers and Caretakers: Emergent Learning from Senegal and Peru,” is based on survey data from nearly 3,500 households in Peru and 1,500 households in Senegal. This data was analyzed using FOAM, a conceptual framework developed by WSP to help identify factors that might facilitate or impeded handwashing with soap practices at critical times.

The analysis revealed that the impact of different determinants varies depending on the chosen proxy measure, such as the presence of a handwashing station or its distance from kitchen or latrine facilities. Given this variability, the Learning Note found that program managers must clearly define the exact behavior they seek to improve before choosing which determinant to focus on in their formative research.

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Africa: political stability and country leadership key to water and sanitation progress

Political stability has heavily influenced progress in improving access to water supply and sanitation services with low-income stable countries outperforming low-income fragile and resource-rich countries.  ”This breaks with the common perception that access to sanitation and water increases with GDP”, says Senior Financial Specialist Dominick de Waal, lead author of a new report [1] by the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation Program (WSP).

The report, commissioned by the African Ministers Council on Water (AMCOW),  maps progress  in water supply and sanitation of 32 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa. WSP carried out the country studies together with the African Development Bank in close partnership with UNICEF, WHO, and the 32 governments.

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Senegal: Access to water is transforming life in rural areas

Kalla Niang, 12, is highly self assured and energetic. She is busily preparing herself for high school, an opportunity that, until recently, would not have been available to her. She lives in the village of Darou Ngaraf in northern Senegal.

Like many girls in rural Senegal, Kalla and her sisters are responsible for many daily chores, including drawing water from a communal well that is located far from their village.

“My sisters and I had to rise before dawn to fetch water, and we were very often late for school,” she said. “We always arrived very tired because drawing and carrying water is not easy.”

Lack of energy and time for an education was not the only danger that Kalla and the other villagers faced by not having access to a reliable source of water. Drawing water from unregulated sources of water put them at risk of diarrhoea and malaria.

A joint UNDP and Government well programme, however, has been improving the opportunities and future of people like Kalla all across Senegal. Launched in 2003, the programme – called the Programme of Drinking Water and Sanitation for the Millennium – is designed to ensure the sustainable supply of drinking water for 2.3 million people in Senegal’s rural areas. It aims to raise the rate of access to clean drinking water by households to 82 percent in 2015 – the deadline for achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) – from 64 percent in 2004.

In September 2009, the programme drilled a well near Darou Ngaraf, providing over 4,000 villagers in 31 villages with the means to pipe clean water into their homes. By 2009, 74 percent of rural residents were able to access potable drinking water, thanks to the programme. If the trend holds steady, Senegal will be able to achieve the MDG target for drinking water.

“Women and children used to suffer the most,” remembered Aminata Guèye, president of a local association of well users. “We spent so much time drawing water and we often came down with water-related diseases.”

“Now we plan to hook up other villages that do not yet have access to clear, potable water,” she said. Villagers pay a small fee to lay down the pipes that will connect their homes to the well in addition to the regular monthly utility fees.

The programme also aims to provide three million more people to an independent system for the disposal of waste water, as well as establishing latrines for schools, clinics, bus stops and weekly markets in rural communities.

For Kalla and her village, access to a clean and regular source of water is opening up new horizons. Village residents hope to gain access to micro-financing in order to set up communal agricultural fields for women farmers.

“The village is becoming greener and more beautiful every day,” she said. “We are going to plant vegetables like carrots, cabbages, potatoes and tomatoes, for our own consumption, and also to sell to other villages.”

One day, Kalla would like to become a teacher. For the time being, however, she is focused on how to provide bathroom facilities for her school, which is located a little over one kilometer away from the village. She wants to make sure the school is equipped with running water, “this precious fluid” as she is fond of calling it.

“Each time I touch it, I touch life itself,” she said.

Source: Darou Ngaraf, UNDP / (allAfrica.com, 26 July 2010

Senegal: WSSCC commits US$ 5 million to sanitation and hygiene work through the Global Sanitation Fund

At a ceremony under the chairmanship of the Honourable Adama Sall, Senegal’s Minister of Urbanisation and Sanitation, on 30 June 2010, the Water Supply and Sanitation Collaborative Council (WSSCC) committed to spend US$ 5 million in Senegal over the next five years through its Global Sanitation Fund (GSF) programme. Together with a similar amount prescribed for Madagascar in March, a total of US$ 10 million has been committed by WSSCC in 2010 through the world’s first multi-donor fund aimed at helping more people attain safe sanitation and practice good hygiene.

Executing Agency: AGETIP

The new Executing Agency responsible for in-country implementation in Senegal is AGETIP (www.agetip.sn), a national not-for-profit development agency. Over the last two years, a multi-stakeholder development and consultative process took place that culminated in the programme launch on Wednesday 30 June in Dakar. AGETIP, together with WSSCC and national partners (including soon-to-be-funded sub-grantees), have thus committed to improving health, environment and welfare levels through better demand-led sanitation and hygiene programming in Senegal.

Scope of work in Senegal: hygiene education, demand creation and awareness raising

The Global Sanitation Fund will work together with Senegal’s Ministry for Sanitation and Public Hygiene to reach the following objectives:

  • Use of participatory techniques such as Community-Led Total Sanitation to end open defection and create demand for toilets;
  • Improve sanitation services for communities that have received little or no national or international sanitation support;
  • Raise awareness of good hygiene practices;
  • Reduce diarrheal disease; and
  • Increase schooling for girls

Global Sanitation Fund programme

The Senegal launch is the latest in the overall procurement and implementation programme being prepared by WSSCC and its Global Sanitation Fund programme in collaboration with partners in the initial GSF countries. In addition to Madagascar and Senegal, these countries include Bangladesh, Benin, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Malawi, Nepal, Nigeria Pakistan, Tanzania, Togo and Uganda.

The Governments of Australia, the Netherlands, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom are contributors to the Global Sanitation Fund.

To learn more, read the press releases:



Ghana/Senegal: research project on safe wastewater reuse for urban poor concludes

The WHO/IDRC/FAO research project on non-treatment options for safe wastewater use in poor urban communities was concluded on 30 April 2010. The report of the final workshop in Amman, Jordan (7-10 March 2010) has now been published.

The objective of the project was to test the applicability of the third edition of the WHO Guidelines for the Safe Use of Wastewater, Excreta and Greywater in Agriculture and Aquaculture (WHO, 2006). For this purpose the following four field studies were conducted:

  • Ghana Kumasi: Evaluation of non-treatment options for maximizing public health benefits of WHO guidelines governing the use of wastewater in urban vegetable production in Ghana.
  • Ghana/Tamale: Minimizing health risks from using excreta and grey water by poor urban and peri-urban farmers in the Tamale municipality, Ghana.
  • Jordan: Safe use of greywater for agriculture in Jerash Refugee Camp: focus on technical, institutional and managerial aspects of non-treatment options.
  • Senegal: Proposition d’étude en vue de l’intégration et de l’application des normes de la réutilization des eaux usées et excréta dans l’agriculture.

The research team is now working on the final product, a Guidance Document/Manual for Sanitation Safety Plans  to assist national and municipal authorities and other usersof the WHO guidelines in their application.

Project documents and the 2006 WHO guidelines are available on the WHO web page on Safe use of wastewater, excreta and greywater.

Senegal: Water quality – Ziguinchor is in a “fairly critical situation”

Senegal’s Ziguinchor Region suffers from serious pollution of its groundwater by farm runoff and salinity, warned the head of the Regional Hydraulic Division, Lamine Bodian. This aggravates an already existing shortage of potable water. A joint effort by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and Senegal’s own potable water and sanitation program, PEPAM, has been addressing the problem in about 50 villages since February 2010. The programme, which will continue until 2014, is being funded by the US to the tune of 9.5 billion francs (around $20 million US) and carried out by the non-governmental group RTI International. [Summary by Louise Shaler, SAHRA]

Source: Agence de Presse Sénégalaise / allAfrica.com, 24 Mar 2010

Senegal: World Bank approves US$55 million loan for Water and Sanitation Millennium Project (PEPAM)

The World Bank’ has approved a US$55 million credit to contribute to increased access to sustainable water and sanitation services in selected rural and urban areas of Senegal within the next five years.

This new financing for the Water and Sanitation Millennium Project (PEPAM) will improve access to safe drinking water and improved sanitation services for more than half a million people in rural areas and peri-urban poor fringe areas, according to World Bank Country Director Habib Fetini.

He also noted, “Senegal’s water and sanitation sector is one of the most developed in sub-Saharan Africa, as the country has already reached the MDG on urban water and has made decisive steps to reach the MDG on rural water.”

Regarding the institutional context in which the project will be implemented, Habib Fetini noted that “Senegal has a proven record in designing innovative reforms and policies in the water and sanitation sector.” He recalled that the reform of the urban water sector, with the establishment of an effective public-private partnership (PPP) “is considered a world-class model and has been replicated with success in several sub-Saharan countries.” This PPP is between the Government, a public asset holding (National Water Company of Senegal, or SONES) in charge of investments, and a private utility (Senegalese Water Utility or SDE) in charge of delivering services.

In order to maintain the “pace of success” in the sector, the Country Director hoped that “the preparation of the second generation reforms in view of end of the current lease contract by April 2011, should be conducted in a transparent manner and based on a shared analysis of all available options for the sustainable development of the sector, based on the principle of financial autonomy with socially acceptable tariffs.”

“This World Bank support will help facilitate access to services through programs for improving and extending water production and distribution systems and urban sanitation networks, by constructing social water and sanitation household connections, public standpipes and on-site sanitation facilities,” indicated Matar Fall, the Bank’s Task Team Leader.

The project will also consolidate the achievements of urban water reform, support reform of the rural water subsector, and strengthen capacities to deliver and manage water and sanitation services.

The credit, which includes a US$5 million contribution under the Crisis Response Window (CRW), will also promote the emergence of local Water Users Associations (ASUFOR) and of small private operators in rural areas, Fall said.

The World Bank has supported the preparation and implementation of the PEPAM since 2005 under the Long Term Water Sector Project, which closed in June 2009.

For more information, visit the Projects website and the PEPAM web site (in French).

Source: World Bank, 19 Feb 2010

Senegal, Tambacounda: 220,000 people to benefit from NGO water and sanitation programme

The French non-governmental organisation Eau Vive has launched a long-term water and sanitation programme in Senegal’s rural Tambacounda Region, announced Antoine Eklou, director of the group’s Senegalese branch. Around 220,000 people will benefit. The region’s potable water coverage is poor: only 20-45% of the population has access to service, and the main source of water is wells that feed earth-lined reservoirs. Nearly 60% of the wells dry up part of the year, said Eklou, and the reservoirs quickly become clogged with sand. As for sewerage, less than 20% of Tambacounda’s population has access to drains.

Source: Louise Shaler, Global Water News Watch summary taken from Agence de Presse Senegalaise, 24 Nov 2009

Senegal: Japan announces US$ 1 million for rural water supply

Fukai Yoshio, head of water projects at the Japanese Cooperation Agency (JICA), announced that his government would invest 450 million francs (roughly US$ 1 million) over the next three years in Senegal’s Departments of Tambacounda, Kolda, and Ziguinchor. Besides equipping boreholes with motorized pumps at 35 sites, the program will create a hygiene committee in each village.
– summary by Louise Shaler

Source: Agence de Presse Sénégalaise / allAfrica.com [in French], 18 Nov 2009

Uganda / Senegal: New procurement notices for the Global Sanitation Fund

WSSCC’s Global Sanitation Fund has issued two new calls for tenders and expressions of interest. Below is a brief description, deadline and link for more information related to Country Programme Monitors in Uganda and Senegal.

• Call for Expression of Interest (EOI), Country Programme Monitor, Global Sanitation Fund, Uganda. Deadline date: 5 November 2009
Download the call

• Notice for Open Tender (RFP), Country Programme Monitor, Global Sanitation Fund, Senegal. Deadline date: 16 November 2009
Dowload the call

Please send enquiries about these notices to WSSCC and not to this blog.

About the Global Sanitation Fund

The purpose of WSSCC’s Global Sanitation Fund is to help large numbers of poor people to attain safe and sustainable sanitation services and adopt good hygiene practices. The Global Sanitation Fund is a single pooled fund open to contribution from any source. The money is allocated to Executing Agencies in carefully selected countries, which then grant funds to Sub-Grantees who implement the sanitation and hygiene work programmes agreed for each country. The whole system is closely monitored by WSSCC as well as in country and global audit mechanisms, of which the Country Programme Monitors are an important mechanism.

More information on the Global Sanitation Fund