Africa Water, Sanitation & Hygiene 2014 Sept - Oct Vol. 9 No.5 | Page 36

Regulation Lessons from the Field Prepaid Water in Urban Africa By Chris Heymans co-authors: Kathy Eales the utility tariff, without an intermediary’s markup and limited hours. Prepaid household connections help manage the risk to customers of debt and possible disconnection and debt, and the risk to service providers of bad debt. Prepaid meters on institutional customers consuming large volumes help manage demand and debt risk, and improved collection can support cross-subsidization to poor customers. Of the three applications, prepaid public standpipes seem most likely to enable water utilities to serve poor households better and offset investment and running costs, provided there is a distribution network with adequate pressure, convenient credit purchase points, and ability to address faults promptly. Water reforms have produced significant impacts on development, including Prepaid water involves far more than metering improvements to drinking water access Credit WaterSan Perspective and new technology. Technically, the system comprises metering, dispensing, and credit-loading an prepaid systems become an instrument to improve components. Its delivery system hinges on several factors. access and quality of water services to poor people in The first is effective credit vending through functional and African cities and towns? Or does prepayment deny poor accessible purchase points, close to customers, easy to use people more access to water? Do prepaid systems cost too at flexible hours, and reliable. Second, close monitoring much and impose more technical, affordability and social and rapid response is essential to identify and resolve pressure on service providers already struggling to cope problems quickly. And a strong focus on communication with growing demand? And what do customers think? with customers is essential, backed up by a service team A new study from the World Bank’s Water and Sanitation geared to act swiftly to remedy faults that affect the supply Program (WSP), The Limits and Possibilities of Prepaid of water that customers have already paid for. Water in Urban Africa: Lessons from the Field, explores Prepayment can benefit customers, and most these questions, drawing on evidence from eight city case seem to like this option. Customers are not primarily studies: Kampala, Nairobi and Nakuru, Lusaka, Maputo, interested in the technology. They want good, affordable Mogale City, Maseru and Windhoek. Most readers know services, reliably delivered. Many say that prepaid systems that in this context new approaches are urgently needed. enable them to manage their accounts more directly, and While urbanization continues to accelerate in Africa, large they know where they sta