A qualitative study on resource barriers facing scaled container-based sanitation service chains

Author:

Ferguson Charlie1,Mallory Adrian1,Anciano Fiona2,Russell Kory3,Valladares Hellen del Rocio Lopez4,Riungu Joy5,Parker Alison1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Cranfield Water Science Institute, Cranfield University, Cranfield MK43 0AL, UK

2. Department of Politics, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

3. School of Architecture and Environment, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR, USA

4. Departamento Académico de Ciencias de la Gestión-Sección Gestión, Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, San Miguel, Peru

5. Sanitation Research Institute, Meru University of Science and Technology, Meru, Kenya

Abstract

Abstract Container-based sanitation (CBS) is an increasingly recognised form of off-grid sanitation provision appropriate for impoverished urban environments. To ensure a safely managed and sustainable service, a managing organisation must implement a service chain that performs robustly and cost-effectively, even with an expanding customer base. These ‘CBS operators’ adopt varying approaches to achieve this objective. Following research including interviews with representatives from six current CBS operators, this paper presents a generalised diagrammatic model of a CBS service chain and discusses the three broad thematic challenges currently faced by these organisations. Supplying cover material is a universal problem with hidden challenges when taking advantage of freely available resources. There is no universally applicable approach for the efficient collection of faecal waste despite the high labour costs of waste collection. The best strategy depends on the CBS operator's overall expansion strategy and the location of fixed features within the served community. Although CBS is technically well-suited to being turned into new products within the circular economy, in practice, this requires a diverse range of skills from CBS operators and is hampered by slow growth in other organic waste recovery services and unhelpful regulation.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Pollution,Waste Management and Disposal,Water Science and Technology,Development

Reference37 articles.

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3. Coates J. & GrayD.2020How Cost Analysis Dispels Myths About Container-Based Sanitation, EY Case Studies. Available from: https://www.ey.com/en_us/corporate-responsibility/how-cost-analysis-dispels-myths-about-container-based-sanitation (accessed 9 November 2021).

4. Evaluating the viability of establishing container-based sanitation in low-income settlements;Waterlines,2019

5. A value proposition: resource recovery from faecal sludge – can it be the driver for improved sanitation?;Resources, Conservation and Recycling,2014

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