Type | Working Paper - FWU Water Resource Publications |
Title | An Analysis of Accessibility and Pricing of Water Supply in Rural Watersheds: a Case Study of Kakamega District, Kenya |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 3 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
Page numbers | 161-172 |
URL | https://www.uni-siegen.de/zew/publikationen/volume0305/shisanya.pdf |
Abstract | The main purpose of this study was to assess accessibility to domestic water in terms of distance, time, and the rate at which households are willing to pay for this water from various sources and at different distances from home. As such, the objectives of this study were to: • Establish the sources of domestic water supply and time/distance covered to water points, • Assess the willingness and rate at which water users are willing to pay for domestic water, and • Ascertain the factors that determine the rate at which water users are willing to pay for water. To achieve the objectives of this study, both documentary and field based techniques were used to collect and analyse information. Interview schedules, key informant interviews and focus group discussions were used to gather the required data. In analysing data, descriptive statistics (frequencies, percentages, means and crosstabulations) as well as inferential statistics (Chi-square, two-way ANOVA and multiple regressions) were used. Out of the 300 respondents, 85% and 77% collected domestic water from springs during dry and rainy seasons, respectively. Over 74% of the respondents got water from roof catchment during rainy seasons. Less than 10% of the respondents used other sources of water during both dry and rainy seasons. Cross-tabulation between water sources and sub-locations revealed that some sources of water such as tap, stream/river and wells were sub-location specific. However, spring and roof catchment as sources of water were used across all sublocations used. |
» | Kenya - Welfare Monitoring Survey 1994 |