Litcius/Paper detail

Comparative performance of rural water supplies during drought

Donald John MacAllister, Alan MacDonald, Seifu Kebede, Samuel Godfrey, Roger Calow

2020Nature Communications82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As rural African communities experience more frequent and extreme droughts, it is increasingly important that water supplies are climate resilient. Using a unique temporal dataset we explore rural water supply (n = 5196) performance during the 2015-16 drought in Ethiopia. Mean functionality ranged from 60% for motorised boreholes to 75% for hand-pumped boreholes. Real-time monitoring and responsive operation and maintenance led to rapid increases in functionality of hand-pumped and, to a lesser extent, motorised boreholes. Increased demand was placed on motorised boreholes in lowland areas as springs, hand-dug-wells and open sources failed. Most users travelled >1 h to access motorised boreholes but <30 min, increasing to 30-60 mins, for hand-pumped boreholes. Boreholes accessing deep (>30 m) groundwater performed best during the drought. Prioritising access to groundwater via multiple improved sources and a portfolio of technologies, such as hand-pumped and motorised boreholes, supported by responsive and proactive operation and maintenance, increases rural water supply resilience.

Topics & Concepts

BoreholeEnvironmental scienceGroundwaterWater supplyWater resource managementHydrology (agriculture)Environmental engineeringGeologyGeotechnical engineeringChild Nutrition and Water AccessWater resources management and optimizationWater Systems and Optimization