Water policy and resilience of potable water infrastructure to climate risks in rural Malawi
Water policy and resilience of potable water infrastructure to climate risks in rural Malawi
Adverse effects of climate risks on access to potable water are increasingly being acknowledged in sub Saharan Africa. Resilient infrastructure supported by appropriate governance arrangements, is therefore central to water security under these extreme weather events. For several decades, governments in sub Saharan Africa have developed governance arrangements including infrastructure and legislation to ensure water security. However, the effectiveness of policy consideration in resilience of potable water infrastructure to climate risks/extreme weather events as well as their seasonality has been a neglected area. Using Zomba rural in Southern Malawi as a case study, this study was therefore aimed at addressing this gap by assessing the effectiveness of local water policy responses to extreme weather events using the 2015 flooding effects on potable water in Zomba rural in Southern Malawi as a case study. The study firstly analysed rainfall and extremes indices for evidence of trends of climate risks in Zomba during the period from 1982 to 2015. To understand the effects of the 2015 flooding on water infrastructure and access to potable water as well as evaluate policy provisions for responses to climate risks, the study further applied a qualitative approach through policy document review, key informant interviews, focus group discussions. The results suggest a generally decreasing annual rainfall pattern with high variability by seasons and frequent occurrences of droughts and flooding. The annual rainfall decrease was not statistically significant at α = 0.05 level, whereas the extremes indices were statistically significant. However, the study found that current policy frameworks are more biased towards drought preparedness as compared to flooding preparedness. For instance, the 2015 floods destroyed vital water supply infrastructure and the responsible institutions could not rehabilitate the damaged infrastructure, leaving communities with intermittent and no supply of potable water for over six months. On the other hand, during dry seasons and drought conditions, the intakes are above the water level. These results show that the present rural water infrastructure is vulnerable and not resilient enough to extreme weather events. In addition, the water institutions are especially not prepared to handle flooding events and their impacts. In this regard, water legislation and infrastructure designs do not adequately take into consideration the effects of extreme events on access to potable water, making water security a challenge in rural Malawi.
Extreme weather events, Potable water, Resilient infrastructure, Water policy
Joshua, Miriam Dalitso
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Tompkins, Emma
a6116704-7140-4e37-bea1-2cbf39b138c3
Schreckenberg, Kate
d3fa344b-bf0d-4358-b12a-5547968f8a77
Ngongondo, Cosmo
c5ca5b5c-feff-4d0a-93b9-305ef1c447af
Gondwe, Esther
85c08d10-1a74-491d-a447-db5210b8fbf6
Chiotha, Sosten
258aabc8-59bc-409e-913f-039647b3edf5
17 June 2022
Joshua, Miriam Dalitso
45bb3394-4ab4-4b30-8037-f1aeb9a54af4
Tompkins, Emma
a6116704-7140-4e37-bea1-2cbf39b138c3
Schreckenberg, Kate
d3fa344b-bf0d-4358-b12a-5547968f8a77
Ngongondo, Cosmo
c5ca5b5c-feff-4d0a-93b9-305ef1c447af
Gondwe, Esther
85c08d10-1a74-491d-a447-db5210b8fbf6
Chiotha, Sosten
258aabc8-59bc-409e-913f-039647b3edf5
Joshua, Miriam Dalitso, Tompkins, Emma, Schreckenberg, Kate, Ngongondo, Cosmo, Gondwe, Esther and Chiotha, Sosten
(2022)
Water policy and resilience of potable water infrastructure to climate risks in rural Malawi.
Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, 127, [103155].
(doi:10.1016/j.pce.2022.103155).
Abstract
Adverse effects of climate risks on access to potable water are increasingly being acknowledged in sub Saharan Africa. Resilient infrastructure supported by appropriate governance arrangements, is therefore central to water security under these extreme weather events. For several decades, governments in sub Saharan Africa have developed governance arrangements including infrastructure and legislation to ensure water security. However, the effectiveness of policy consideration in resilience of potable water infrastructure to climate risks/extreme weather events as well as their seasonality has been a neglected area. Using Zomba rural in Southern Malawi as a case study, this study was therefore aimed at addressing this gap by assessing the effectiveness of local water policy responses to extreme weather events using the 2015 flooding effects on potable water in Zomba rural in Southern Malawi as a case study. The study firstly analysed rainfall and extremes indices for evidence of trends of climate risks in Zomba during the period from 1982 to 2015. To understand the effects of the 2015 flooding on water infrastructure and access to potable water as well as evaluate policy provisions for responses to climate risks, the study further applied a qualitative approach through policy document review, key informant interviews, focus group discussions. The results suggest a generally decreasing annual rainfall pattern with high variability by seasons and frequent occurrences of droughts and flooding. The annual rainfall decrease was not statistically significant at α = 0.05 level, whereas the extremes indices were statistically significant. However, the study found that current policy frameworks are more biased towards drought preparedness as compared to flooding preparedness. For instance, the 2015 floods destroyed vital water supply infrastructure and the responsible institutions could not rehabilitate the damaged infrastructure, leaving communities with intermittent and no supply of potable water for over six months. On the other hand, during dry seasons and drought conditions, the intakes are above the water level. These results show that the present rural water infrastructure is vulnerable and not resilient enough to extreme weather events. In addition, the water institutions are especially not prepared to handle flooding events and their impacts. In this regard, water legislation and infrastructure designs do not adequately take into consideration the effects of extreme events on access to potable water, making water security a challenge in rural Malawi.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 7 June 2022
Published date: 17 June 2022
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
I acknowledge funding from the United Kingdom's Ecosystem Services for Poverty Alleviation (ESPA) project ‘Attaining Sustainable Services from Ecosystems using Trade-off Scenarios’ (grant number: NE-J002267-1 )
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors
Keywords:
Extreme weather events, Potable water, Resilient infrastructure, Water policy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 486199
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/486199
ISSN: 1474-7065
PURE UUID: d48ea4ea-daac-4eac-a9a1-551899b246f9
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Date deposited: 12 Jan 2024 17:46
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:19
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Contributors
Author:
Kate Schreckenberg
Author:
Cosmo Ngongondo
Author:
Esther Gondwe
Author:
Sosten Chiotha
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