Demand-Side Water Strategies and the Urban Poor

Reports/papers (non-specific)
, 68 pages
PDF (1.2 MB)
9160IIED.pdf
Language:
English
Published: January 2002
Poverty, Inequality, and the Environment
ISBN: 9781843692317
Product code:9160IIED

Demand-side water management is typically presented as part of an integrated approach to water-resources management, correcting a historic tendency to overemphasise supply-side investment. Somewhat ironically, demand-side water management itself has come to be associated with a narrow approach that emphasises conservation and fails to address other demand-side issues. Meanwhile, especially in poor urban settlements, other demand-side approaches have been receiving increasing attention. The aim of this paper is to examine the relevance of demand-side water management to low-income urban settlements, where many households do not have adequate access to safe water supplies. The conclusion is that demand-side water strategies could play an important role and that the need to move away from a narrow supply-fix approach is just as compelling in poor as in affluent settings. However, many of the insights, priorities and tools that have come to be associated with demand-side management are inappropriate to low-income settings.

Cite this publication

McGranahan, G. (2002). Demand-Side Water Strategies and the Urban Poor. .
Available at https://www.iied.org/9160iied