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Identifying bottlenecks to water governance in Madagascar

Through a step-by-step process, SIWI's Antoine Delepiere and Virginia Mariezcurrena helped key actors of the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) sector in Madagascar to diagnose why the sector is not performing as expected.
Cityscape with water of Antananarivo

In September 2023, you visited Antananarivo, Madagascar. What was the purpose of your visit?  

The purpose of the visit was to conduct a three-day workshop with key actors of the water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) sector in the country. We were invited by the WASH team of UNICEF, as SIWI has a partnership agreement with them. To prepare and conduct these kinds of workshops is one of the services SIWI usually delivers to them. 

The workshops are named after the methodology they uses: WASHBAT which is short for “WASH Bottleneck Analysis tool”. It takes months of preparation, which were worked out online through remote collaboration. 

SIWI has been conducting been conducting the WASH BAT methodology since a long time. What is WASH BAT, and how did you ensure that your work was contextually relevant? 

WASHBAT is a participatory methodology that, through a step-by-step process, helps a group of stakeholders diagnose and identify why the sector is not performing as it should.  

When it comes to making our work relevant in the context of operation, we included two main steps. First, we referred to recommendations from WASH BAT exercises that were previously conducted in Madagascar. As they were not streamlined, we incorporated some of that information in our analysis to prepare for our workshop. Second, we also integrated climate risks in the region into our workshop through literature review and a validation exercise with WASH and climate experts that was done in 2022.  

The group of stakeholders invited to our 3-day workshop included WASH service providers, the government, water users, development cooperation, among others. In general, we found that coverage and access to water is low, and for those who have access, the services are not equally distributed among rural and urban population. Further, the quality of the water cannot be ensured.  

We supported the reasoning of stakeholders of why the conditions existed, what the bottlenecks to good performance are. Through this series of steps, we brought them from the diagnostic to an action plan for the next 2-5 years.  

BY:

Antoine Delepiere
Antoine Delepiere

Senior Programme Manager

antoine.delepiere@siwi.org

+46 7 20 50 60 21

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