Leonard Veryee, Fombe Lawrence Fon, Kometa Sunday Shende
{"title":"State of Urban Household Drinking Water Security Situation in Bamenda North West Region, Cameroon","authors":"Leonard Veryee, Fombe Lawrence Fon, Kometa Sunday Shende","doi":"10.5296/emsd.v12i2.21459","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Urban water governance is a rising challenge across the third world countries where the population is increasingly combating water crisis. The situation in the city of Bamenda has obliged the population to resort to doubtful sources and is exposed to water borne diseases despite the multiple water supply systems in the city. The study aimed to assess the state of urban household drinking water in the city of Bamenda. In order to meet the objective, a total of 420 questionnaires were administered to households in the three Sub-Divisions of the city accompanied by interviews. Data was analysed by use of the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25, Microsoft excel and Microsoft word 2016. Findings reveal that, multiple water supply sources prevail in the city (pipe borne water 65%, boreholes 18.6%, wells 8.3%, and spring/stream 8.1%) with three major pipe borne water suppliers. Approximately 25% of the study population obtained water from sources located off their premises and an average of 79.9% of the 25% spend over 30 minutes trekking for over a kilometre to fetch water. There is high financial cost in acquiring home water connection with an average rate of 200,000 FCFA (333.26 U.S Dollar). Since 2005 the city population has not met the minimum water of 50 l/p/d. In order to solve the water insecurity within the city, the study proposed that all water providers should ensure transparency, accountability, participation, the development of new water infrastructures and improvement on existing ones and financial support from the state.","PeriodicalId":487198,"journal":{"name":"Environmental Management and Sustainable Development","volume":"46 26","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-14","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Environmental Management and Sustainable Development","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5296/emsd.v12i2.21459","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Urban water governance is a rising challenge across the third world countries where the population is increasingly combating water crisis. The situation in the city of Bamenda has obliged the population to resort to doubtful sources and is exposed to water borne diseases despite the multiple water supply systems in the city. The study aimed to assess the state of urban household drinking water in the city of Bamenda. In order to meet the objective, a total of 420 questionnaires were administered to households in the three Sub-Divisions of the city accompanied by interviews. Data was analysed by use of the Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 25, Microsoft excel and Microsoft word 2016. Findings reveal that, multiple water supply sources prevail in the city (pipe borne water 65%, boreholes 18.6%, wells 8.3%, and spring/stream 8.1%) with three major pipe borne water suppliers. Approximately 25% of the study population obtained water from sources located off their premises and an average of 79.9% of the 25% spend over 30 minutes trekking for over a kilometre to fetch water. There is high financial cost in acquiring home water connection with an average rate of 200,000 FCFA (333.26 U.S Dollar). Since 2005 the city population has not met the minimum water of 50 l/p/d. In order to solve the water insecurity within the city, the study proposed that all water providers should ensure transparency, accountability, participation, the development of new water infrastructures and improvement on existing ones and financial support from the state.
城市水治理是第三世界国家面临的一个日益严峻的挑战,因为第三世界国家的人口正日益与水危机作斗争。巴门达市的情况迫使居民求助于可疑的水源,尽管该市有多种供水系统,但仍有可能感染水传播疾病。该研究旨在评估巴门达市城市家庭饮用水状况。为了达到调查目标,我们对全市三个分区的住户共发放了420份问卷,并进行了访谈。数据分析使用社会科学统计软件包(SPSS)第25版,Microsoft excel和Microsoft word 2016。结果表明:我市供水水源多,管道供水占65%,钻孔供水占18.6%,井供水占8.3%,泉/溪供水占8.1%;大约25%的研究人口从住所附近的水源取水,其中79.9%的人平均花费30分钟以上的时间徒步超过一公里的路程取水。获得家庭用水连接的财务成本很高,平均费用为200,000 FCFA(333.26美元)。自2005年以来,城市人口就没有达到每天50升的最低用水标准。为了解决城市内的水不安全问题,该研究建议所有供水供应商应确保透明度、问责制、参与、开发新的水基础设施和改善现有的基础设施,并获得国家的财政支持。