aydpels

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

Water planning, management under FNDP

By Pelekelo Liswaniso

IT WAS probably one of the most highly profiled gatherings in the water sector in recent years because it constituted some of the best brains Zambia has ever produced in academia, economics, finance, planning and other disciplines.

This was the just ended National Workshop for Directors of Water-Related Government Ministries and Heads of Planning, which took place at Mukuba Hotel in Ndola early this month.

Delegates were all directors drawn from various ministries and government departments across the country with the common purpose of raising the agenda of water and sanitation in the process of implementing the 5th National Development Plan (FNDP).

Finance Minister, Ng’andu Magande presented the document to President Mwanawasa a few days ago at Lusaka’s Mulungushi International conference centre.

The directors’ workshop was organised under the auspices of the Zambia Water Partnership (ZWP) in conjunction with the Ministry of Finance and National Planning.

ZWP is part of a regional network of the Global Water Partnership (GWP- Southern Africa) that collaborates closely with both the SADC Water Division at the regional level and government departments in many SADC members states to promote and influence Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM).

After four days of brain-storming and planning by some of the country’s think –tanks, it was resolved that water and sanitation were a key strategy in fighting poverty and the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The MDGs, which range from halving extreme poverty to halting the spread of HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases and providing universal primary education, all by the target date of 2015 – form a blueprint agreed to by all the world’s countries and all the world’s leading development institutions.

The MDGs have galvanised unprecedented efforts to meet the needs of the world’s poorest. They promote maternal health, gender equality and aim at combating child mortality, promoting environmental sustainability and developing a global partnership for development.

Director of Planning in the Ministry of Energy and Water Development, Benny Chuundu, announced at the close of the workshop that the delegates agreed that the current efforts in water resources management were disjointed and fragmented.

It was therefore crucial that the various stakeholders should address poverty and attain the MDGs by applying the principles of IWRM.

IWRM is a process, which promotes the coordinated development and management of water and land resources to maximize the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems.

Mr. Chuundu who was speaking on behalf of Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Energy and Water Development, Buleti Nsemukila, who had earlier officially opened the workshop, said the challenge now was to implement the IWRM plan with concrete activities that are measurable.

Zambia, he said, was endowed with abundant water resources but that the country suffers from low levels of water utilisation and development and it was a shame that the country was still wallowing in poverty.

“There is need for increased water use and development imperatives for economic and social development,” Mr Chuundu said.

Earlier, in his opening remarks, Dr Nsemukila outlined how Government initiated the water sector reforms in 1994 with the launch of a forward looking water policy, and also begun comprehensive water resources reforms in 2000 under the Water Resources Action Programme (WRAP).

The reforms have targeted the legislative and institutional frameworks in order to enable the Ministry of Energy and Water Development manage the country’s water resources more efficiently and effectively.

Dr Nsemukila said now that the FNDP has been finalised and approved, it would require considerable resources to implement. Within the water related sectors, it has long been recognized that IWRM is the approach for intersectoral coordination.

“There will be need to have an integrated and coordinated implementation framework among sectors to avoid duplication and overlap and achieve maximum impact, he said.

The FNDP shows that the lists of development programmes are sectoral with each sector outlining its implementation mechanism.

Dr Nsemukila said his ministry has water and sanitation as one of the priority sectors in the FNDP.

“As the common adage Water is life proclaims, social and economic development cannot progress without a well developed and managed water sector, ”he said.

Dr Nsemukila observed that managing water is cross-sectoral with various institutions undertaking various interventions, adding that water in its natural state is “one resource” and knows no division and that this makes managing water complex.

To accelerate implementation of the IWRM and the Water Efficiency Plan in the FNDP, the directors agreed that sector consultations across provinces be arranged with the Water Sector Advisory Groups (WSAG), technical working groups including the health sector.

It was agreed that a national workshop to sensitize permanent secretaries in ministries with functions related to water provision should also be arranged soon and that all directors engaged in planning should monitor and evaluate the various national activities to ensure that water and sanitation were given priority.

Former Director of Planning and Economic Management, James Mulungushi, also agreed that implementation of the FNDP will require substantial resources.

Mr Mulungushi noted that a number of priority programmes have also been identified in the Medium Term Expenditure Framework 2007-2009 relating to Water Resources Management, Water Supply and Sanitation as well as irrigation for development.

He said the Ministry of Finance and National Planning was pleased to be associated with the directors’ meeting on water and sanitation as it marks the beginning of a coordinated effort to implement objectives of the FNDP.

He observed that expectations from the FNDP were high partly because the consultative process has been extensive and many people feel a degree of ownership.

Mr Mulungushi, who has just been appointed permanent secretary by President Mwanawasa for the newly created Planning and Economic Division, will be responsible for strategic planning of Zambia’s development.

“We have consulted so much, that surely the possibility of failure to capture significant ideas that are fundamental towards the development of our country cannot be a possibility. In addition to the process, we should all be expectant of this plan because the economic environment upon which is to be delivered, is a positive one,” Mr. Mulungushi said.

Mr Mulungushi said this year’s policy framework aims at enhancing rural development, especially agriculture, strengthening the linkages between the resource sectors with manufacturing, fostering a competitive and outward-oriented economy and improving infrastructure and social delivery including water.

The economic performance of Zambia has shown considerable improvements in the last few years, he said. Real Gross Domestic Product growth has averaged 4.7 per cent between 2002 to 2005 as opposed to an average of 2.2 per cent in the previous four years.

“Greater growth was actually experienced in 2005, at 5.1 percent compared to the 5.4 per cent of 2004. For the same period, per capita income grew at 2.3 per cent annually, as opposed to the declining trend of the 1990s,”

The overall inflation and interest rates during the period 2002 to 2006, he said also assumed a declining trend.

“Inflation was at 8.2 in 2006. Interest rates too, have exhibited a downward trend, as a result of the vigorously pursued government policy to reduce government borrowing,” he said.

Furthermore, Zambia has benefited from debt relief under the heavily indebted Poor Countries Initiative (HIPC). Due to this initiative and government’s timely debt service payments, Zambia’s debt stock has significantly reduced.

At the end of 2006, data indicated that Zambia’s external debt stock stood at US $500 million as opposed to the US $7.1 billion at the of 2004.

An elated Mr. Mulungushi said the implications of these write-offs are tremendous because Zambia will be saving annually an estimated US $180 million or K600 billion in debt service.

Clearly this is a significant amount of resources, which can be channeled towards reaching some of the Millennium Development Goals.

Government is therefore determined to focus its policies and programmes, through the FNDP in order to take opportunity of this generous external debt service scheme,”

In order to enhance the implementation of the FNDP, Mr. Mulungushi said government is implementing public sector reforms such as through the Public Sector Reform Programme covering Public Expenditure Management and Financial Accounting Reforms (PEMFA).

Components of PEMFA include the development of Integrated financial management and Information System (IFMIS) and the Medium Term Expenditure Framework designed in order to improve accountability, transparency and management of public resources.

“As we move forward, it is absolutely important that we do not reduce the significance of these reforms, which promote greater efficiencies and effectiveness,” he said.

The macro economic framework for 2007, he said, include accelerating pro poor growth, stabilise inflation to single digit, achieve exchange rate stability while the macro economic targets include achieving real GDP growth of 6 per cent, achieving inflation of less than 5 per cent, limiting domestic borrowing to 1.3 per cent and achieve the official gross international reserves to 2 months of imports.

Indeed, if water and sanitation are prioritized in the framework, there is no doubt that Zambia is heading for a turn around and a definite improvement in the lives of the people.

Sunday, January 14, 2007

Water, Sanitation: High on Development Agenda

By PELEKELO LISWANISO

THE year 2006 is gone but not forgotten. And as the nation braces itself for new challenges in the New Year, the next five days will go down in the annals of history as special days on the Zambian calendar because they will mark a major turning point on how water resources in the country can help improve lives of the more than 12 million people, majority of whom are poor in rural and peril-urban areas.

Government in collaboration with the Zambia Water Partnership (ZWP) is organising a national forum from January 7 to 11 for stakeholders in the water sector in a bid to improve water supply services and sanitation in the country.

The forum, which has been dubbed as The National Workshop for Directors and Sanitation Related Government Ministries and Heads of Planning, has been slated for Ndola’s Mukuba Hotel.

The organisation of the workshop arises from the fact that water resources development and management is one of the key sectors in the Fifth National Development Plan (FNDP) in fostering the country’s social economic development.

Announcing this before the close of last year, Secretary to the Treasury, Evans Chibiliti said the workshop would kick start the water sector and provincial consultations as well as mark the start of the implementation of interventions outlined in the FNDP.

The strategic focus of the FNDP is socio-economic infrastructure and human resource development aimed at promoting wealth creation through sustained broad-based economic growth and poverty reduction.

The workshop is envisaged to introduce the Integrated Water Resources Management (IWRM) and Water Efficiency Plan.

IWRM is a process, which promotes the coordinated development and management of water and land resources to maximise the resultant economic and social welfare in an equitable manner without compromising the sustainability of vital ecosystems.

The IWRM and Water Efficiency Plan has been taken in Zambia as a road map to guide the country from fragmented ways of developing, managing and using water resources. It helps the government to address key water problems such as water for food, water for agricultural productivity, water for domestic use and water for energy and environment.

It is a key milestone for poverty reduction and the realisation of water related 2015 Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

The plan is cross-sectoral and explains the responsibility of water related government agencies such as the Ministries of Energy and Water Development, Agriculture and Cooperatives, Health, Gender, Local Government and Housing, Environment, Tourism and Natural Resources, Finance and National Planning.

The plan outlines the actions and resources required to manage, use and develop water resources in an integrated manner to maximise the socio-economic benefits and improve people’s livelihoods now and in the future.

“In addition, it is expected that the workshop will identify key challenges and opportunities in the water sector and priority areas to be considered in the 2007-2009 Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) and in the 2007 budget,” Mr. Chibiliti said in invitation letters to participants.

In the medium-term, Government’s objectives are aimed at preserving and consolidating the macroeconomic stability achieved in the last few years.

The importance of inter-sectoral coordination and integration in the implementation of programmes in the water related sectors in the FNDP would also be highlighted. Benefits of IWRM will be identified and strategies for implementation mapped out.

The FNDP was developed through a consultative process involving major stakeholders including the civil society, cooperating partners and the private sector. The process involved considerable input from stakeholders through the District and Provincial Development Coordination Committees and at the central level, through the Sector Advisory Groups (SAGs).

Some of the priority sectors in the FNDP include water and sanitation, public safety, education and health, agriculture and infrastructure. With regards to water and sanitation, government has also recognised the role it plays in the improvement of people’s well being as it is key in the operations of almost all sectors.

Among the speakers scheduled to make presentations include ZWP chairman, Mr. Osward Chanda, who is also the National Water Supply and Sanitation Council (NAWSCO) director, Professor Imasiku Nyambe, a geologist at the University of Zambia.

Others are director of Water Affairs, Mr Adam Hussein and Mr. Lubinda Aongola of the Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources, Mr. Kenneth Chense of Nkana Water and Sewerage Company, James Mulungushi, Ministry of Finance and National Planning, Peter Lubambo, Ministry of Local Government and Housing, Mr. Benny Chuundu, Ministry of Energy and Water Development, Mr. Rees Mwasambili, Ministry of Local Government and Housing and many other water specialists.

According to information released by the ZWP secretariat at the University of Zambia, government has committed itself to meeting the international goals of providing water and sanitation facilities to all citizens in the country.

It is in view of this background that has prompted the government to place water and sanitation as one of the priority sectors in the FNDP. This is also in line with Zambia’s aspiration for clean and safe water supply and sanitation envisaged in the vision 2030.

According to information available to the Daily Mail, the FNDP has been finalised and its implementation will require substantial resources.

A look at the programmes in the NDP shows that the lists of programmes are sectoral with each sector outlining its own implementation mechanism.

Similarly, a number of priority programmes have been identified in the Medium Term Expenditure Framework relating to water resources management, water supply and sanitation as well as irrigation development.

Therefore, for the implementation of these programmes to yield maximum benefits, it has long been recognised that IWRM is the approach for intersectoral coordination.

“There will be need to have an integrated and coordinated implementation framework among sectors to avoid duplication and overlap and to achieve maximum impact,” explained, Mr Chimwanga Maseka, the ZWP Project Manager for the Partnership for Africa’s Water Development (PAWD) project.

Mr Maseka observed in an interview that the government through the Ministry of Energy and Water Development, with facilitation from ZWP, has been developing a long term implementation framework on IWRM plan for water related sectors linked to the national long term vision (2030).

“An IWRM plan for water related sectors is in line with international developments for improving planning and sectoral coordination among sectors,” he said.

The workshop comes in the wake of resolutions made at the World Summit on Sustainable Development (WSSD) in Johannesburg in 2000 where water was identified as a key element in meeting the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). This led to the establishment of a target “for countries to establish IWRM and water efficiency plans by 2005”.

The international community pledged to support countries in meeting this target, which is a key element in achieving the MDGs of halving by 2015, the proportion of people without sustainable access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation services.

In 2004 the Ministry of Energy and Water Development initiated the process of preparation of a national IWRM and Water Efficiency plan for the sustainable management of water resources in Zambia and this was facilitated by ZWP through the PAWD project.

It is important, therefore, that the country takes cognisance of the fact that sustainable water development and management is a critical component of development for all societies and Zambia cannot afford to be left behind in planning for the future. This meeting in Ndola coming at the very beginning of the year 2007 is, therefore, very timely indeed.