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Volume 3 | Issue 1 | Spring 2007
Abstract
User satisfaction and sustainability of drinking water schemes in rural communities of Nepal
Betman Bhandari1* & Miriam Grant2
1Centre for Affordable Water and Sanitation Technology, 2916 5th Avenue NE, Calgary, Alberta T2A 6K4 Canada (email: bbhandari@cawst.org)
2 Department of Geography, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta T2N 1N4 Canada
(email: grant@ucalgary.ca)
Water-supply programs consist of three essential components: technology, people, and institutions. The interface of these facets determines whether a particular scheme is sustainable. This article highlights the differences in maintaining and operating water-supply systems in rural villages and rural market centers in Nepal. The analysis considers disparities between users’ willingness to pay based on data collected through surveys of 205 households and representatives of 12 water-user committees. Due to varying geographical locations and socioeconomic conditions among rural villages and rural market centers, core operation and maintenance problems for drinking water sustainability are immensely different. Weak institutional capacity is the prime obstacle in the provision of drinking water in the rural villages while technicalities such as insufficient water quality and inconvenient water-point locations are the major issues in the rural market centers. Moreover, levels of user satisfaction influence the operation and maintenance of both types of systems. This study considers user-satisfaction parameters and the overall influence of satisfaction on users’ willingness to pay.
KEYWORDS: rural areas, municipal water supplies, sustainable development, social behavior, socioeconomic factors, drinking water
Citation: Bhandari, B. & Grant, M. 2007. User satisfaction and sustainability of drinking water schemes in rural communities of Nepal . Sustainability: Science, Practice, & Policy 3(1):12-20. http://ejournal.nbii.org/archives/vol3iss1/0604-017.bhandari.html.
Published online April 18, 2007
© 2007 Bhandari & Grant |
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