Seasonal Access to Water in Khagalgaun

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Nicola Greene, Lee Bosher, Mike Smith Water Engineering and Development Centre Loughborough University [email protected] Seasonal Access to Water in Khagalgaun, Humla District, Nepal

Transcript of Seasonal Access to Water in Khagalgaun

Nicola Greene, Lee Bosher, Mike Smith Water Engineering and Development Centre Loughborough University [email protected]

Seasonal Access to Water in Khagalgaun, Humla District, Nepal

Format of presentation

• Justification for research

• Methodology

• Findings

• Further research

STORY STATI STICS

But what’s the story behind them?

Improved Drinking Water Supply

Nepal 89*% 80**%

Urban: Rural:

2000 94% 81%

2010 93% 88%

1990 96% 74%

Districts Mountain: Hill: Terai:

76% 82% 78% *UNICEF – JMP 2012

**WaterAid - 2011

48%

64% Gov of Nepal

48% WaterAid

“Seasonality is one of the most neglected dimensions of rural poverty”

(Chambers 2009; Devereux & Sabates-Wheeler 2009)

But is it important to consider

seasonality for water

supply?

Drinking Water

Coverage (%)

100

0

64

Time t

Drinking Water

Coverage (%)

100

0

64

Time Review

64+ x

Temporal poverty is frequently analysed, but the trends examined are typically inter-year (i.e. year to year).

Drinking Water

Coverage (%)

0

x

Time (months)

a

b

Intra-annual

variation

Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun July Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec

1. ASKED (+ LISTENED) • 90 semi structured interviews with community members

• 9 Focus Group Discussions

• 30 Key Informant Interviews

2. LOOKED • Lived in the area for 9 months

• Observation of behaviour and

infrastructure functionality

• Detailed field notes + diary

Revolutionary Research Method

“I’m actually going to lose my mind” 19/02/12

“Bed bugs make me very very sad” 30/03/12

3. Made a lot of calendars

RAINY

AUTUMN WINTER

SPRING

0

1

2

3

4

5

Water Availability

LOW

HIGH

0

1

2

3

4

5

Water Demand

LOW

HIGH

0

1

2

3

4

5

Surplus/Deficit

0

1

2

3

4

5

Surplus/Deficit

In winter season, people quarrel from early morning to late evening over access to water

(Kha7-M)

SPRING RAINY

WINTER AUTUMN

• Extremely low quantity • Shortages for irrigation

• Very slippery after rain • Landslides sweep tanks away • Sand in water • Many people away

• Very slippery with snow • Hard to climb steep slopes • Pipes/tanks frozen • All animals and people home

• No time to collect water • Tanks block with leaves/debris

Findings

• This study raises issues of

– Best practice data collection in areas with highly seasonal climate

– Data intensive nature of ‘capturing’ seasonality

– Confidence attributed to data from areas with highly seasonal climates

– Degree with which ‘snapshot’ data is relied upon for decision making in allocation and implementation of projects

Other Seasonal Analyses

• Livelihoods

• Institutional calendar

• Health and vectors for disease

• Bathing, clothes washing and hygiene

• Sanitation

Nicola Greene

E-mail: [email protected]

Twitter: @NicNakNoe