Delaire Caroline, Peletz Rachel, Kumpel Emily, Kisiangani Joyce, Bain Robert, Khush Ranjiv
The Aquaya Institute , PO Box 21862, Nairobi, Kenya.
Division of Data, Research and Policy, UNICEF , 3 UN Plaza, New York, New York 10017, United States.
Environ Sci Technol. 2017 Jun 6;51(11):5869-5878. doi: 10.1021/acs.est.6b06442. Epub 2017 May 12.
Microbial water quality monitoring is crucial for managing water resources and protecting public health. However, institutional testing activities in sub-Saharan Africa are currently limited. Because the economics of water quality testing are poorly understood, the extent to which cost may be a barrier to monitoring in different settings is unclear. This study used cost data from 18 African monitoring institutions (piped water suppliers and health surveillance agencies in six countries) and estimates of water supply type coverage from 15 countries to assess the annual financial requirements for microbial water testing at both national and regional levels, using World Health Organization recommendations for sampling frequency. We found that a microbial water quality test costs 21.0 ± 11.3 USD, on average, including consumables, equipment, labor, and logistics, which is higher than previously calculated. Our annual cost estimates for microbial monitoring of piped supplies and improved point sources ranged between 8 000 USD for Equatorial Guinea and 1.9 million USD for Ethiopia, depending primarily on the population served but also on the distribution of piped water system sizes. A comparison with current national water and sanitation budgets showed that the cost of implementing prescribed testing levels represents a relatively modest proportion of existing budgets (<2%). At the regional level, we estimated that monitoring the microbial quality of all improved water sources in sub-Saharan Africa would cost 16.0 million USD per year, which is minimal in comparison to the projected annual capital costs of achieving Sustainable Development Goal 6.1 of safe water for all (14.8 billion USD).
微生物水质监测对于水资源管理和保护公众健康至关重要。然而,撒哈拉以南非洲地区目前的机构检测活动有限。由于对水质检测的经济性了解不足,尚不清楚成本在不同环境下对监测构成障碍的程度。本研究利用来自18个非洲监测机构(六个国家的自来水供应商和健康监测机构)的成本数据以及15个国家的供水类型覆盖范围估计值,按照世界卫生组织的采样频率建议,评估了国家和区域层面微生物水质检测的年度资金需求。我们发现,微生物水质检测平均成本为21.0±11.3美元,包括耗材、设备、人工和物流成本,这一成本高于此前的计算结果。我们对自来水供应和改良点源的微生物监测年度成本估计在赤道几内亚为8000美元至埃塞俄比亚为190万美元之间,主要取决于服务人口数量,也取决于自来水系统规模的分布情况。与当前国家水和卫生预算的比较表明,实施规定检测水平的成本在现有预算中占比相对较小(<2%)。在区域层面,我们估计,监测撒哈拉以南非洲所有改良水源的微生物质量每年将花费1600万美元,与实现人人享有安全饮用水的可持续发展目标6.1的预计年度资本成本(148亿美元)相比,这一成本微不足道。