Entries from June 2009

Water Information Network – South Africa (WIN-SA) has opened a social network site on Ning.com. The site offers its nearly 100 members (as of 22 June 2009), mostly from South Africa, the opportunity to participate in forums, start groups, to blog, and post event announcements, photos and videos.
WIN-SA is a network of organisations focusing on improving knowledge sharing in the water and sanitation sector.
Go to the web site
Categories: Africa · Sanitation · Water supply · Web sites
Tagged: Ning, S0907-Net, South Africa, Water Information Network - South Africa, WIN-SA
Pacific Institute president and international water expert Dr. Peter Gleick has started a blog “about the water challenges facing California, the West, and our world” in April 2009. In his blog Gleick explores “the threats and challenges to our freshwater resources” and discusses “available, viable solutions to those threats, drawing from not only [his] experiences and viewpoint, but also by way of numbers”. In each post Gleick includes “an important, unusual, or newsworthy water number” to highlight some piece of the water issue.
The number is Gleick’s first post was the “one billion people without access to improved, safe, or affordable drinking water”.
Go to the Water By Numbers blog.
Categories: Blogs · Water resources management
Tagged: Pacific Institute, Peter Gleick
Iza, A. and Stein, R. (eds) (2009). RULE : reforming water governance. Gland, Switzerland, IUCN. 130 p. ISBN 978-2-8317-1027-3
This toolkit will introduce readers to the central role played by policy, law and institutions in designing and implementing good governance for water resources. It will guide users through approaches to reforming water governance, including useful mechanisms for incorporating environmental considerations into water laws and policies. It is intended for use by water professionals, working in water management, who do not have a law background.
Contents
Chapter 1. Creating Water Governance Capacity
1.1 Managing water effectively
1.2 Importance of policy and law
1.3 Water governance capacity
1.4 Organization of RULE
1.5 The water governance capacity checklist
Chapter 2. Linking Policies to Realities
2.1 The role of water policy
2.2 Vision for the future
2.3 Water policy principles
2.4 Process principles for water policy
2.5 Context of water policy reform
2.6 Typology of water policy and planning reforms
2.7 Linking policies to realities: general principles
2.8 Reforming water policy: practical steps
Chapter 3. Transforming Policy into Law
3.1 Features of water law
3.2 The context, role and reach of water resources legislation
3.3 Water allocation
3.4 Water quality protection
3.5 Incorporating conservation into water law
3.6 Prescribing institutional functions
3.7 Weaknesses of existing legal systems
3.8 Reforming water law: practical steps
Chapter 4. Building a Sound Institutional Mechanism
4.1 Building governmental water institutions
4.2 Types of water institutions
4.3 Four levels of water institutions
4.4 Designing institutions for IWRM
4.5 Funding water institutions
4.6 Public participation and civil society organizations
4.7 Private-sector roles in water management
4.8 Practical steps and indicative principles
Chapter 5. Implementing Water Governance Capacity
5.1 Enabling implementation
5.2 Regulations
5.3 Monitoring and information management mechanisms
5.4 Compliance and enforcement
5.5 RULE: A framework for effective water governance
Categories: Capacity development · Governance · Monitoring & evaluation · Participatory Management · Policies & legislation · Publications · Water quality · Water resources management
Tagged: integrated water resources management, S0907-Publications
Bartram, J. … [et al] (2009). Water safety plan manual: step-by-step risk management for drinking-water suppliers. Geneva, Switzerland, World Health Organization . 108 p. ISBN 978-92-4-156263-8
Download here
In 2004, the WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality recommended that water suppliers develop and implement “Water Safety Plans” (WSPs) in order to systematically assess and manage risks. Since this time, governments and regulators, water suppliers and practitioners have increasingly embraced this approach, but they have also requested further guidance. This workbook answers this call by describing how to develop and implement a WSP in clear and practical terms.
The Manual, co-published with the International Water Association (IWA) is divided into 11 Modules, each representing a key step in the WSP development and implementation process. Every Module is divided into three sections: ‘Overview’, ‘Examples and Tools’, and ‘Case Studies’. The case studies were drawn from WSP initiatives in Australia, the Latin American and the Caribbean region (LAC), and the United Kingdom.
List of modules:
Module 1. Assemble the WSP team
Module 2. Describe the water supply system
Module 3. Identify hazards and hazardous events and assess the risks
Module 4. Determine and validate control measures, reassess and prioritize the risks
Module 5. Develop, implement and maintain an improvement/upgrade plan
Module 6. Define monitoring of the control measures
Module 7. Verify the effectiveness of the WSP
Module 8. Prepare management procedures
Module 9. Develop supporting programmes
Module 10. Plan and carry out periodic review of the WSP
Module 11. Revise the WSP following an incident
Categories: Europe & Central Asia · Latin America & Caribbean · Publications · Water quality · Water supply
Tagged: drinking water, International Water Association, manuals, risk management, S0907-Publications, water safety plans, World Health Organization
Ludwig, F., Kabat, P., Schaik, H. van and Valk, M. van der (2009). Climate change adaptation in the water sector. London, UK, Earthscan. 304 p. ISBN 9781844076529
Price: £49.95
Google preview
Order online
This book offers a compendium of climate adaptation strategies in the water sector for students, water managers and decision makers. The book consists of two parts: the first part describes the general issues and is written mainly by the editors of the book and the second part contains specific case studies. These are drawn from a wide range of contrasting countries, including Australia, Thailand, the Netherlands, Germany, Philippines, South Africa, and Yemen.
Contents
Introduction
Part I: Climate Change and Water
- The Art of Predicting Climate Variability and Change
- Climate Change Scenarios at the Global and Local Scale
- The Impacts of Climate Change on Water
- Managing Water Under Current Climate Variability
- Using Seasonal Climate Forecasts for Water Management
- Adapting to Climate Change in the Water Sector
- Climate Proofing
Part II: Case Studies
- Adaptation to Climate Change and Social Justice: Challenges for Flood and Disaster Management in Thailand
- Water and Spatial Planning in The Netherlands: Living with Water in the Context of Climate Change
- Climate Change and Alluvial Aquifiers in Arid Regions – Examples from Yemen
- A Water Utility’s Approach to Addressing the Potential Impacts of Climate Change
- Adaptation Measures for the Metropolitan Water Supply for Perth, Western Australia
- Benefits and Costs of Measures for Coping with Water and Climate Change: Berg River Basin, South Africa
- Institutional Adaptation to Climate Change: Current Status and Future Strategies in the Elbe Basin, Germany
- The Use of Seasonal Climate Forecasts Within a Shared Reservoir System: The Case of Angat Reservoir, Philippines
Index
Categories: Water resources management · Water supply
Tagged: South Africa, climate change, Yemen, Philippines, S0907-Publications, climate adaptation, climate variability, Thailand

Slow sand filtration is a filtration system for relatively small scale waterworks. Since it is cheaper to install and maintain than rapid sand filtration which is current mainstream in Japan, it can be more suitable for developing countries depending on the conditions.
The Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA) has produced a multimedia-based learning package “Slow sand filtration: creating clean, safe water” in English and Japanese, consisting of a video and reference materials.
The video (26 min) can be viewed in 6 parts. Parts 1-5 provide background information on large-scale and small-scale application of slow sand filtration technology in Japan. Part 6 is about a JICA project in Sierra Leone.
The reference documents are on an introduction to Ecological Purification System [5.7 MB] (new concept and new name of slow sand filtration) and a report on the Water Supply Management System in Kambia District project [15.6 MB] in Sierra Leone.
Categories: Africa · Capacity development · East Asia & Pacific · Publications · Videos · Water treatment
Tagged: Japan, Japan International Cooperation Agency, Sierra Leone, slow sand filtration
WaterAid has produced a new poster resource that rates different water supply technology options in relation to their relative capital cost, operational cost, water quantity supplied and water quality supplied.
The poster also provides information on the situations in which certain water supply technologies are most applicable.
Levels of appropriateness are colour coded based on different combinations of the above variables.
The resource can be printed as a poster on A4, A3 or A2. You can download it here:
Water source options – a comparison ( PDF 93KB)

Categories: Posters · Technology · Water collection · Water quality · Water treatment
Tagged: costs, technology selection, WaterAid
Corruption in the water sector both puts at risk the lives of billions of people and slows development. Yet, there are many individuals, organisations and initiatives worldwide that have developed creative and effective ways to enhance water integrity. The Case Information Sheets are an initiative to support local action and disseminate this information on a global level. They are authored by individuals and groups who have suffered from the negative impacts of corruption on water provision and therefore initiated successful local actions to improve their situation.
There is a world map showing the locations where cases are from.
Case Information Sheets can be submitted online. Selected contributions receive an award of Euro 300.
So far the following Case Information Sheets have been published:
Categories: Africa · East Asia & Pacific · Latin America & Caribbean · Publications · Sanitation · South Asia · Transparency · Water supply
Tagged: Bolivia, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Lesotho, S0907-Publications, uganda, Water Integrity Network, water utilities
Read all about the WASHCost project on its new website. The WASHCost project website aims to share good quality information on the project which is being implemented with local partners in Burkina Faso, Ghana, India and Mozambique. Twelve frequently asked questions on the new site will help you understand what the project is about. Stories from the different countries give insight into why this project is needed.
The project (2008-2012) is researching the life-cycle costs of water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services in rural and peri-urban areas in the WASHCost countries. Its rationale is that WASH governance will improve at all levels, as decision makers and stakeholders analyse the costs of sustainable, equitable and efficient services and put their knowledge to use.
Go to the WASHCost website
Categories: Financing · Governance · Sanitation · Water supply · Web sites
Tagged: Burkina Faso, Ghana, India, life-cycle costs, S0907-Net, WASHCost
Barron, J. (ed) and Stockholm Environment Institute (2009). Rainwater harvesting: a lifeline for human well-being : a report prepared for UNEP. x, 69 p. Nairobi, Kenya: UNEP. ISBN: 978-92-807-3019-7
Download here
This publication highlights the link between rainwater harvesting, ecosystems and human well being and draws the attention of readers to both the negative and positive aspects of using this technology and how the negative benefits can be minimized and positive capitalized.
It discusses watershed management, rainfed agriculture, forestry, urban water management and flood mitigation, rural water supply and climate change.
Categories: Publications · Storm drainage · Water collection · Water resources management
Tagged: climate change, ecosystems, forestry, rainwater harvesting, rural water supply, S0907-Publications, urban water supply, watershed management