Join us in the Journey to Transformation: A new series
MENU

How to Improve Sanitation Across an Entire City: the Case of Visakhapatnam

August 29, 2018

By Neil Jeffery - Water and Sanitation for the Urban Poor

Half of the one billion people in the world who still defecate in the open live in India. Poor sanitation in India is not just a rural issue: at least 157 million urban poor Indians lack access to decent toilets and one in 10 deaths in India are related to poor sanitation.

The port city of Visakhapatnam, also known as Vizag, is the largest city and an industrial center in the southern Indian state of Andhra Pradesh.

Water & Sanitation for the Urban Poor (WSUP) has just completed a three-year programme in this city, funded by USAID, which has made a major difference to the lives of 250,000 residents and created a model for how cities in India can make rapid strides to improve sanitation.

At World Water Week in Stockholm, WSUP will talk about the conclusion of this highly successful project and how its experiences can inform future work towards achieving universal access to sanitation in India.

Public toilet in Visakhapatnam
Public toilet in Visakhapatnam

Ending Open Defecation and Improving Services

Open defecation – the practice of going to the toilet outside – pollutes water supplies; diminishes people’s dignity and safety, and leads to the spread of diseases such as cholera and dysentery. This, in turn, can lead to malnutrition, child stunting, and even death.

The solution to this complex problem is not just about building toilets and raising public awareness. People need to change centuries-old behaviors and be prepared to pay for and regularly use toilets.

But improving sanitation for residents also goes beyond eliminating open defecation. To reduce the risk of disease spreading, a key challenge is to ensure the safe management and treatment of waste from toilets that are not connected to sewers.

Success in Visakhapatnam

From 2015-2018, WSUP worked with the city of Visakhapatnam, as part of India’s Swachh Bharat Mission, an ambitious national programme led by Prime Minister Narendra Modi. As a result of the partnership, the city eliminated open defecation in 2016 and improved access to a toilet for 250,000 people. The city rose from 44th to the third cleanest city in India in 2017. It has become a city that other states want to emulate.

We found that the following components were crucial for a successful program:

  • Leadership from city authorities

The Greater Visakhapatnam Municipal Corporation was fully behind the program, with strong leadership and guidance from the Commissioner. His leadership, in our experience, is an essential element for citywide change and to ensure the change will be sustainable for the long-term.

  • Mobilising community groups

WSUP worked with local communities to design and implement new methods for eradicating open defecation.

Rather than try and cover the whole city at once, our team developed a unique ward-by-ward approach to stop open defecation. The program tapped into existing community groups to better understand sanitation needs and promote behavior change.

Read more about WSUP’s ward-by-ward approach.

Clean facilities in one of the city's public toilets
Clean facilities in one of the city’s public toilets

 

  • Seeing people as consumers, not beneficiaries

Rather than view residents as passive beneficiaries, we took a consumer-led approach, recognizing the importance of developing services and products which people actually want – and will pay for.

This resulted, for example, in public toilets being redesigned with better lighting, accessibility, and separate entrances for men and women.

  • Strong involvement from the private sector

Many of the vacuum tankers which empty waste from toilets are private sector operated, and improving these services was a vital part of the program. As a result, standards for adequate services rolled out and operators were trained in safe practices. Licensed operators are now allowed to dump their waste in city disposal points rather than in drains or rivers as they were doing before – reducing environmental pollution and improving water quality.

A private sector operator emptying waste in an official city dumping station
A private sector operator emptying waste in an official city dumping station

Other states are now looking to Visakhapatnam to learn more about the model that WSUP Advisory—our consultancy arm—developed with city authorities. The Indian government’s Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs has now adopted many of the guidelines and policies produced by the project as good practice to help drive forward the national Swachh Bharat initiative.

Learn more about WSUP’s work in India, and find out how WSUP works with cities to improve water and sanitation at www.wsup.com.

 

Related Content

223492
Understanding Intergenerational Trauma and Healing in Social Impact
Skoll Foundation - , July 9, 2024
Systems that are designed to exclude and oppress people frequently cause pain and trauma across generations. Intergenerational trauma stalls growth and progress within individuals, communities, and movements for liberation. How…
223411
Breaking the Chain: Dr. Olajide Williams on Inherited Trauma and Hip Hop as a Tool for Social Change
Jimmie Briggs - Skoll Foundation , June 27, 2024
Edited by Annah Mason To heal oppressive systems, we must address the cycles of pain and trauma they cause for people and communities across generations. The work of trauma-informed practitioners…
222705
Launching the Centre For Exponential Change: A support network for system orchestrators
Rohini Nilekani - Rohini Nilekani Philanthropies , Donald Gips - Skoll Foundation , April 1, 2024
If you happen to drive along the highway connecting Guwahati and Shillong in the Northeast of India, you may want to stop at a few of the 350 rural Primary…