Skip to main content
To KTH's start page To KTH's start page

Paving the Way for Pro-Poor and Sustainable WASH, Article by David Nilsson et al.

Cropped photo taken by David Nilsson. The full photo is published in the article.
Published Oct 21, 2020

"Although billions of people worldwide have gained access to basic drinking water and sanitation during the last two decades, data suggests that ‘leaving no one behind’ by 2030 would require doubling the current annual rate of progress sanitation and hygiene targets within the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs. In peri-urban areas, the increasing number of unconnected customers poses additional challenges. Businessas-usual will not address the problems of low coverage, inadequate service levels and poor sustainability of water and sanitation systems. A combination of new technologies with innovative models of service delivery will be needed to close the existing gaps and reduce inequalities. In particular, service providers will need to simultaneously adopt new, informal solutions for unconnected users and more traditional, formal mechanisms to connect more users to the centralized piped infrastructure, through an ambidextrous strategy"

Ricard Giné and Alejandro Jiménez, SIWI, David Nilsson, KTH, and Pär Blomkvist, MDH has written a publication based on the conclusions from the research project “The role of Local Innovation for a Transformative Shift towards sustainable water and sanitation in African cities”. The project was aimed at understanding how the large systems for urban water and sanitation change in sub-Saharan Africa contexts, and in particular, how local innovation can contribute to system-level change.

Full article: Paving the way for pro-poor and sustainable WASH: The role of local innovation

Project page with full list of publications: The Role of Local Innovation for Sustainable Water and Sanitation