Type | Working Paper |
Title | Contemporary Water Governance in the Global South |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | https://www.researchgate.net/profile/OA_KAkumu/publication/253460623_Privatisation_of_the_Urban_Water_Supply_in_Kenya_Policy_Framework_for_Pro-Poor_Provision/links/5579398108aeacff20028ec0.pdf |
Abstract | Over the decades privatization has become a predominant paradigm in the provision of water both in the global North and South (Hukka, 2003). In the context of the latter, this chapter presents Kenya as a case study where experiments with the privatization of water began way back in 1995 (see K’Akumu and Appida, 2006). Seven years down the line, in 2002, a major law was passed as a reform package to provide the enabling environment for water privatization and marketization among other things (see Republic of Kenya, 2002). Specifically, the law is divided into two main parts: Part III – dealing with Water Resources Management and Part IV – dealing with Water Supply and Sewerage services (K’Akumu, 2008). However this chapter only deals with the latter and particularly tackles privatization of the urban water supply. The chapter proceeds in two parts. The first part deals with the issues that initially drove the privatization project. At the international level, difficulties in provision in low- and middle-income nations have been cited as the main drivers of privatization. Nevertheless, for the case of Kenya, other issues were also at play including an increasing urban population, under-served slum areas, and the outbreaks of waterborne diseases. It is also worth noting that privatization can proceed in different ways based on different models (see Harris’s framing piece, Chapter 10). The Kenyan project culminated into the ‘Public Limited Company’ (PLC) model following the initiatives of the ‘Northern-based’ German development partners. |
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