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Comparing utility-reported hours of piped water supply to households’ experiences

Engineering and Technology

Comparing utility-reported hours of piped water supply to households’ experiences

F. Rawas, R. Bain, et al.

Explore the intriguing discrepancies in water supply continuity reporting in Peru! This study reveals a gap between utility benchmarking data and households' experience of water outages, conducted by researchers Farah Rawas, Rob Bain, and Emily Kumpel.... show more
Abstract
Piped water supplies that deliver water only intermittently serve more than one billion people around the world. Measuring the continuity of these intermittent water supplies (IWS) is necessary for tracking utility performance and understanding the impact on consumers. We compared reporting of IWS continuity between utility benchmarking data on hours of water supply and households’ reports of water outages in piped systems in Peru. Nationally, the estimated population with IWS as reported by households (23–26%) was slightly higher than that reported by utilities (20–21%) from 2010 to 2014. While the national population with IWS was markedly similar between both measures, household- and utility-reported IWS matched in only 2 of the 23 regions of Peru. We examined the influence of varying thresholds of water supply continuity on the results. Our findings highlight a need to reconcile different approaches to monitoring piped water supply continuity.
Publisher
npj Clean Water
Published On
Mar 12, 2020
Authors
Farah Rawas, Rob Bain, Emily Kumpel
Tags
intermittent water supply
utility benchmarking
household reports
water outages
Peru
piped systems
water supply continuity
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