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Sanitation in India

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Sanitation In India
Sanitation In India
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Sanitation in India

  1. 1. Sanitation Problem in India Jatin,Raghav,Nisarg,Lovin,Abhineet,Munneza
  2. 2. Presentation Agenda Introduction to the problem Costs associated with poor sanitation Government Initiatives Role of private sector & NGOs Learnings & Opportunities as future managers
  3. 3. Indians defecate everywhere. They defecate mostly besides the railway tracks. But they also defecate on the beaches; they defecate on the hills; they defecate on the river banks; they defecate on the streets; they never look for cover.” —V.S. Naipaul, An Area of Darkness, 1964 “There is no use blasting Agni missiles if the sanitation problem is not solved “ “It’s more important than the launch of Agni missiles. If there are no toilets, then Agni is of no use. The price of just one fighter aircraft is enough to free one thousand villages from open defecation.” —Jairam Ramesh My identity is of a Hindutvawadi, but I say build toilets before you build temples,“ —Narendra Modi More Temples than Toilets!!!! More Mobiles than Toilets!!!!
  4. 4. India – Next Superpower or World’s Largest open air Loo  60% of all open defecations in the world are in India  64% of Indians defecate in the open  That amounts to a staggering 626 million people going to relieve themselves in the open every morning!!!
  5. 5. India is all set to miss United Nation’s Millennium Development Goals to double the number of households with a toilet facility by 2015.
  6. 6. A point to ponder – a case of misplaced priorities???
  7. 7. Primary Research The group visited the village Farmana Khas located about 15 kilometers from the Rohtak-Hissar highway. The village was awarded the Nirmal Gram award for achieving 100% sanitation under the "total sanitation programme. Success of “No bride without a toilet campaign in the village” “The greatest obstacle in improving sanitation conditions is in changing the mindset of people. There are families with Corollas parked in their houses, but the houses have no toilets.” -Mr. Sheel Kumar, Chief Sanitary Officer Rohtak District
  8. 8. Costs of poor Sanitation
  9. 9. Cost of poor Sanitation
  10. 10. Public sector Initiatives Initiative % Description Target Shortcomings • Make India Open Defecation free by 2022 • To cover all schools with toilets by December 2008; Nirmal Bharat Abhiyan or Total Sanitation Campaign • Construction of Individual Household Toilets • Community Sanitary Complex • Institutional Toilets - Schools and Anganwadi • Solid and Liquid Waste Management • Maintenance of facilities under NBA • Participatory Approach–Individual / Community • Active involvement of PRIs, CBOs, NGOs & SHGs • Households that have benefitted once would not be eligible for any further assistance • No involvement of private sector • Issue of local leadership • Largest incentive scheme launched by GOI for Panchayati Raj Institutions • Award given to panchayats which become free from Open Defecation and maintain clean environment • Improving and maintaining sanitation facilities • Solid and Liquid Waste Management and creation of additional sanitation facilities • Officials’ vested interests in clocking higher numbers. • Quality of sanitation not assured before awarding the status • Improving the quality of life of people in rural areas • Provide privacy and dignity to women • Construction of sanitary toilets for households below poverty line in rural areas •Inefficiencies implementation Nirmal Gram Puraskar Central Rural Sanitation Program • Expanded in 1993 to include personal hygiene and home sanitation in
  11. 11. CHALLENGES The current system of financing sanitation is fragmented between the national and state governments which poses several delivery challenges There is general lack of awareness, especially in the rural areas, about the importance of proper sanitation Socio-economic factors like poverty and caste discrimination among the poor and SCs/STs have led to lower reach of sanitation and clean drinking water among them. Lack of proper waste disposal systems
  12. 12. NGOs & Private Sector Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation • Started Water, Sanitation and hygiene program • To create the next generation of sanitation technologies. • Investments in sanitation tools and technologies— including toilet design, pit emptying, sludge treatment, and the disposal or reuse of waste Sulabh International Social Service Organization • Notable success in field of cost-effective sanitation and liberation of scavengers • 1.2 million Sulabh Household toilets constructed and 54 million government toilets constructed based on Sulabh design • 8000+ Sulabh community toilet blocks constructed Private Sector • Public Private Partnerships- Finance, Skill, Expertise • CSR Initiatives by companies
  13. 13. Media Campaigns
  14. 14. Recommendations
  15. 15. Recommendations
  16. 16. Recommendations
  17. 17. Objectives Enable all households to have access to and use toilets Ensure all government schools and anganwadis have functional toilets, urinals and access to safe drinking water Ensure sustainability of Drinking water sources and systems Enable rural communities to monitor and keep surveillance n their drinking water resources
  18. 18. Framework for sanitation in slums Local Government: Provide and maintain drainage and toilet Local Govt. Technology Partner MR Sustainable Ecosystem of USE Facilitator Slum Community organizatio ns/NGO Active Government Participation Community based finances facilities, subsidize toilet infrastructure and specialized awareness campaigns, legal environment, regulator, maintains trunk infrastructure and approves individual household levels Micro Financial Institutions: Link funds to projects and infrastructure Slum Household Support: Sense of ownership among households-chit fund concept, improved maintenance, target must be willing for initial contribution Community based Organizations: Acts as link between government/MFIs and households, motivates the slums and attracts the government, guides families to connections, attracts entrepreneurs for opportunity at the bottom of the pyramid and guides and trains facilitators in motivating individual households Facilitator: motivates households , people’s representative involved in decision making Technology partner: Start ups gaining credibility by being in government projects, cheap technology providers and advisors Community Mobilization Technology & Infrastructure Support
  19. 19. 4 I Framework to help improve sanitation condition Role of Institutions • NGO’s to be involved only in initial period following which community takes over. • Involvement from corporations help sourcing of funds • Large FMCG groups can provide toilet cleaning agents and soaps as a part of CSR e.g. Sustainable living Programme by Unilever Incentives • Electricity generated for the village • Permanent Employment for villagers • Revenue from power generation can be used t further scale up and provide better solutions Information • Use social donors to keep donors and stakeholders updated about progress • Progress made in a particular community can be used as a model for their villages Inclination • During the initial phase NGO’s will be involved in educating the villagers about sanitation and only once there this complete buy in, they should go ahead setting up the infrastructure
  20. 20. Promoting Individual Behaviour Change Knowledge CHANGE Focus on change at different levels Multiple dimensions influence individual behaviour as depicted in the figure below Interpersonal factors, socio- cultural and policy environments all influence sanitation and hygiene behaviours
  21. 21. STRUCTURAL ENVIRONMENT Infrastructure, economic barriers PUBLIC POLICY National, state, local laws INSTITUTIONAL Staff capacities, resources, mandate SOCIO-CULTURAL Community norms and social networks INTERPERSONAL Family & friends INDIVIDUAL Knowledge, attitudes, skills, practices C4D - ICO
  22. 22. How do new ideas spread ? Innovators 2% Early Adopters 14% Early Majority 34% Late Majority 34% Late Adopters 10% Resistors 6% Individuals and peers groups can effectively influence others groups and draw them in to be more open to new ideas, as their peers have already modeled before them.
  23. 23. Reinventing The Toilet Bill and Melinda Gates Foundations “Reinvent the toilet- challenge” launched in India BIO-DIGESTER technology to be installed in Konkan Railway But Marketing and Communication is a problem for ERAM & also Lack of Knowledge of private companies and NGO Eram’s “She Toilet” and “Ceti Projects” implemeted in Kerela has bagged innovation award
  24. 24. Learning as Managers 680 billion sanitation market by 2020
  25. 25. “ Sanitation is more important than freedom. ”

Notes de l'éditeur

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