Environmental Transects Surveys of Mismanaged Waste in Off-Grid Neighbourhoods of Kisumu, Kenya, and Greater Accra, Ghana, 2021

Umar, Farouk and Amponsah, Mavis and Damkjaer, Simon and Dzodzomenyo, Mawuli and Okotto, Lorna-Grace and Okotto-Okotto, Joseph and Oigo, James and Shaw, Peter and Wright, Jim and Väisänen, Heini and Wanza, Peggy (2023). Environmental Transects Surveys of Mismanaged Waste in Off-Grid Neighbourhoods of Kisumu, Kenya, and Greater Accra, Ghana, 2021. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-856145

According to WHO/UNICEF, whilst 91.8% of urban households in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) had access to piped or protected groundwater sources in 2015, only 46.2% had safely managed water available when needed. Vendors provide a key role in supplying urban off-grid populations, with consumption of bottled or bagged water (sachets, water sold in 500ml plastic bags) growing in SSA. Whilst several studies show bottles and bags are usually free from faecal contamination, given that many off-grid urban populations lack solid waste disposal services, when people drink such water, there can be problems disposing of the plastic bags and bottles afterwards. This project aims to deliver evidence on the different ways that people sell water to off-grid populations and what this means for plastic waste management. We plan to do this in Ghana, where most urban household now drink bagged water, and by way of contrast, Kenya, where the government has banned plastic bags. In this way, we want to widen access to safe water and waste management services among urban off-grid populations, by supporting water-sellers and waste collectors to fill the gaps in municipal services. Both countries (and many others elsewhere) already have nationwide household surveys that collect data on the food and goods people consume and the services they have. However, as yet, these surveys have not been connected to the problem of waste management. We plan to visit marketplaces, buying foods and then recording packaging and organic waste. By combining this information with the household survey data, we can work out how much domestic waste like plastics gets collected and how much is discarded or burned, ultimately entering the atmosphere or oceans. In Ghana, we will also survey informal waste collectors in urban Greater Accra. We want to find out how much these small businesses support waste collection and recycling across this urban region (particularly plastic from bagged water), so we can help government identify gaps in waste collection coverage. We also believe highlighting the important role of small waste collectors could lead to greater business support for such collectors. We will also evaluate whether community education campaigns to encourage domestic waste recycling reduce the amount of waste and plastic observed in the local environment. Such campaigns are currently pursued by several local charities with support from the Plastic Waste Management Project. In Kenya, where water is usually sold in jerrycans rather than bagged, the jerrycan water often gets contaminated. We plan to find out whether this jerrycan water is safer under an arrangement known as delegated management. This involves a water utility passing on management of the piped network to a local business in slum areas, so as to reduce vandalism of pipes and bring water closer to slum-dwellers. We will compare water quality in areas with and without this arrangement to see if it makes the water sold safer. We also plan to bring water-sellers and consumers together to find and test ways of reducing contamination of water between a jerry-can being filled and water being drunk at home. Rather than imposing a solution, we want to work together with vendors and consumers on this issue, but there are for example containers designed to keep water cleaner that we could explore. Through these activities, we thus plan to develop evidence on different strategies for water-sellers to deliver safer water to people lacking piped connections, whilst managing plastic waste at the same time. In Ghana, this involves trying to increase recycling and waste collection for bagged water, which is relatively safe. In Kenya, this involves trying to reduce contamination of water sold in reusable jerrycans. Alongside our household survey evidence on how domestic waste is managed in slums, this should help governments plan waste and water services in poorer areas of Africa's expanding cities.

Data description (abstract)

This data set records mismanaged waste in off-grid neighbourhoods lacking essential services in two cities, namely Greater Accra in Ghana and Kisumu in Kenya. The underlying study aimed to quantify mismanaged waste patterns and composition in both cities and evaluate the extent to which environmental transect surveys could be used to quantify mismanaged waste in off-grid urban settings. Two surveyors independently recorded scattered waste items, burnt waste piles, and large waste piles along transects repeated at different times of day. Findings suggest that scattered waste density is considerably higher in Kisumu than in Greater Accra and that products such as nappies and water packaging are locally important waste components. Bland and Altman analysis suggests high inter-observer variation in scattered waste counts, but strong agreement between observers in recording waste piles.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Umar Farouk University of Southampton https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9613-2857
Amponsah Mavis University of Ghana
Damkjaer Simon University of Southampton https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0758-6038
Dzodzomenyo Mawuli University of Ghana https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4709-3182
Okotto Lorna-Grace Jaramogi Oginga Odinga University of Science and Technology https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0109-3942
Okotto-Okotto Joseph Victoria Institute for Research on Environment and Development International https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4656-8369
Oigo James Victoria Institute for Research on Environment and Development International
Shaw Peter University of Southampton https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0925-5010
Wright Jim University of Southampton https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8842-2181
Väisänen Heini University of Southampton https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5494-0415
Wanza Peggy Victoria Institute for Research on Environment and Development International
Sponsors: ESRC
Grant reference: ES/T008121/1
Topic classification: Natural environment
Housing and land use
Keywords: GHANA, KENYA, ENVIRONMENT, SLUMS, WASTES, WASTE COLLECTION, WASTE DISPOSAL AND HANDLING, WASTE LANDS
Project title: Expanding safe water and waste management service access to off-grid urban populations in Africa
Grant holders: Jim Wright, Joseph Okotto-Okotto, Mawuli Dzodzomenyo, Lorna Okotto, Allan Hill, Heini Vaisanen, Peter Shaw
Project dates:
FromTo
31 March 202030 November 2023
Date published: 17 Mar 2023 09:04
Last modified: 11 Sep 2023 15:14

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