Goals and challenges facing the water and sanitation sector
If you are working within a national water and sanitation authority, you know what responsibilities and challenges come with developing sector policies and strategies. Dealing with the reform of the public sector has a deep impact on the way your administration operates, both internally and with the other sector stakeholders.
If you are working at regional level, you support decentralised governments in their role of contracting authority of water supply and sanitation services. You also promote the sharing of services at regional level, for example the set-up of operation and maintenance (O&M) and spare part systems.
If you are working at the local level, then decentralisation has made you a key actor in the provision of basic services (drinking water, sanitation facilities, schools, health centres, etc.) to the population. Procurement and contract management, technical and financial management, and operation and maintenance of the communal infrastructure is your challenge.
If you are part of a user group or community-based organisation, you have mutliple responsibilities: to guarantee that the needs of the beneficiaries are taken into account throughout the project cycle; to help educate and inform the population; and to promote behaviour change through hygiene awareness and the financial or in kind contribution to the operation and maintenance of the facilities.
The right mix for your project
IGIP has built up valuable expertise in development cooperation from 30 years of involvement in the institutional and capacity development aspects of water and sanitation projects.
This means that at IGIP, we are highly experienced in:
- supporting participatory and demand responsive approaches
- facilitating user contribution and promoting willingness to pay
- providing assistance to regional and local communal development plans
- promoting improved governance, integrated water resource management and private sector participation.
Working with us gives you access to proven knowledge, methods and tools, as well as to pioneering concepts that aid both basic service provision and institutional projects.
We build our project teams by gathering high-level international consultants and the very best national experts. Our teams include, among others, experienced economists, sociologists, marketing experts, geographers, topographers, and surveyors.
We trust specialists who already have a history of commitment to Development Assistance - people with a track record in boosting infrastructure projects, strengthening communities and driving development in your part of the world.
Sound planners know that capable and dedicated people are the cornerstone of outstanding accomplishments. We build our teams around the right people, professionally and socially, to help our clients drive their projects forward successfully.
Mobilising teams that move forward
Improved governance, institutional and capacity development are required preconditions to secure access to and sustainability of basic services. Below are some examples of IGIP's Development Assistance activities that help institutions make positive change.
IGIP assists ministries in developing and strengthening their human resources to plan, manage and evaluate water and sanitation sector policies and conduct public sector reforms. Many of our technical assistance projects focus on helping authorities set up smart programmes for rural water supply and sanitation - IGIP is a recognised specialist in this field.
IGIP assists regional and municipal authorities in meeting the challenge of decentralisation. We help authorities increase the professional skills of their personnel, manage water and sanitation facilities more efficiently and increase cooperation with the private sector.
Information, education and communication are needed at all levels of society: national, regional or district and local authorities, user and community-based organisations, NGOs, professional sectors. IGIP has cutting-edge expertise in developing training programmes and awareness-raising campaigns.