posted on 2018-02-12, 15:09authored byCallist Tindimugaya
Groundwater plays a significant role in rural water supply but its development has been made with very little information
on the hydrogeological conditions and groundwater potential of various areas of the country. This has not only resulted in
unsuccessful water sources but also in resources being spent on very expensive water supply technologies when cheaper
and more sustainable ones are possible. This in turn has affected government’s efforts to increase rural water supply coverage,
which currently stands at 58 percent. In order to significantly improve water supply coverage in the country using
low-cost, simple water-supply technologies, Uganda has initiated a Groundwater Mapping Programme to prepare maps
representing groundwater resources in terms of their quantity and quality and summarizing this information spatially. Six
different types of maps have been prepared all of which are important in guiding proper planning of groundwater development
activities. Groundwater maps are guiding district political and technical officials on the most feasible water supply
technology options to consider in various areas and are also providing them with indications of areas with low water supply
coverage, which require more attention. The districts are now exclusively constructing shallow wells in areas where
they are indicated as feasible as opposed to the past practice of construction deep boreholes everywhere. The people with
the lowest water supply coverage are also using the maps to bargain for their equitable share of government resources.
It is expected that with the availability of groundwater maps there will be a reduction in failure of wells and cost of water
supply systems resulting in increase in water supply coverage and hence more benefit to the people.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Research Unit
Water, Engineering and Development Centre (WEDC)
Published in
WEDC Conference
Citation
TINDIMUGAYA, C., 2004. Groundwater mapping and its implications for rural water supply coverage in Uganda. IN: Godfrey, S. (ed). People-centred approaches to water and environmental sanitation: Proceedings of the 30th WEDC International Conference, Vientiane, Laos, 25-29 October 2004, pp. 454-456.
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