Evaluation of Cost Recovery for Water Supply in Makurdi Town, Nigeria

Filed in Articles by on June 23, 2022

Evaluation of Cost Recovery for Water Supply in Makurdi Town, Nigeria.

ABSTRACT

As urban areas in Nigeria continue to grow, the need to meet increasing water demand for the population has become a major problem of concern to Urban Managers. The State water agency that are supposed to provide adequate and potable water supply to urban population have records of poor performance.

To achieve the national and state water supply policy objectives of the issue of cost recovery reforms was introduced, imperatively. However to carry out cost recovery in our water sectors to provide efficient and sustainable water supply for the urban needs in a bid to protecting the vulnerable groups is important.

In view of the stringent need to understand the intricate of cost recovery, the research study on the evaluation of cost recovery for water supply was instituted, the study evaluates the existing scenario of cost recovery for water supply service and its implications in Makurdi town with the population of 503.114.

The survey investigation was based on a three settlement groups namely; high, medium and low residential density which has ten (10) substantive neighbourhoods settlements as the sampling framework in where a sample of 326 households was sampled (representing 0.3%sample size of the 95,577 total households in Makurdi).

The sample size was drawn across the three settlement hierarchy named above which are served by the Water Board.

The results obtained shows that the cost recovery for the operation and maintenance (O&M) of water supply in Makurdi urban area was only 43% and 57% of the cost recovery enquired during water supply and provisioning in the study area were not recovered by the water board.

BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY

The state of cost recovery in Nigeria has remained a matter of concern given the importance of cost recovery in the economic wellbeing of the entrepreneurs and the growth and development process of the economy. Unfortunately, cost recovery for water services has no consensual recommendation across the world.

While some international organizations from the developed world tend to recommend it as being essential for the financial sustainability of water utilities (OECD, 2006), that is not the case for some worldwide reaching organizations such as the United Nations.

Which is more concerned with the impact such a principle would have on the poor, leading it to recognize the role that subsidization may have on the improvement of population provision levels in water supply and sewage drainage and treatment (UNDP, 2006.

This may be due to the fact that in developed countries, the water outlays represent a very small portion of the average household income, whereas in developing countries the implementation of full cost recovery would put greater stress on households‟ budgets.

The provision of clean water to consumers entails a cost both in terms of initial capital outlay and ongoing operation, maintenance, management and extension of services. However, because of poor planning of cost-recovery, a lack of government funding and inadequate tariff rates, the ability of water services sector to recover costs is often limited even for routine operation and maintenance.

REFERENCES

Aderibigbe, S.A., Awoyemi, A.O and Osagbemi, G.K (2008); “Availability, Adequacy andQuality of Water Supply in Ilorin Metropolis, Nigeria”;
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Admassu, M., Kumie, A and Fantahun, M (2003); “Sustainability of Drinking Water SupplyProjects in Rural of North Gondar, Ethiopia”; Ethiopian Journal of Health Development.
Africa Sector Review (1997), Gender in water resources management: water supply and sanitation; Earthscan Publications Ltd, London
Akintola, F.O and Areola O (1980) Domestic Water Consumption in Urban Areas: A case study in Ibadan City, Nigeria Water Supply and Management.
Alonso (1998); “The Willingness to Pay for Reducing the Harm from Future water leakagesinFinland- An Application of Contingent Valuation Method”; Paper No 18; Environmental Economics; University of Helsinki; Finland.

CSN Team.

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