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The Sustainable City in Africa Facing the Challenge of Liquid Sanitation

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Erschienen am 05.04.2023
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Bibliografische Daten
ISBN/EAN: 9781394209422
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 272 S., 22.17 MB
Auflage: 1. Auflage 2023
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Format: PDF
DRM: Adobe DRM

Beschreibung

This book questions the role of liquid sanitation in the development of cities in Africa. The absence of sewerage networks and treatment plants in African cities already submerged by rapid and anarchic urbanization is a major problem.

To meet this challenge, it is urgent to rethink urban water governance and impose and enforce sustainable urban planning standards. In other words, sanitation issues must now be placed at the heart of urban planning.

Autorenportrait

Esoh Elamé is a geographer, town planner, geologist and pedagogist. He is a professor at the University of Padua, Italy, as well as a permanent associate professor at the National Advanced School of Public Works and at Institut des Relations Internationales du Cameroun (IRIC) of the University of Yaoundé II, Cameroon. His research focuses on African cities and intercultural sustainable development.

Inhalt

Introduction xiEsoh ELAMÉ

Acknowledgments xvii

Chapter 1 Sustainable Cities and Domestic Wastewater Treatment: The Case of Africa 1Esoh ELAMÉ

1.1 Setting the context 1

1.2 Theoretical framework: the sustainable city in Africa 4

1.3 Methodological framework 9

1.4 Prospects for changes to be implemented 9

1.4.1 For a consensual and African definition of the city 10

1.4.2 Making the sustainable city a specific priority objective of urban planning in African cities 15

1.4.3 Sustainable African cities and Black African civilization 19

1.4.4 Making the sustainable city the symbol of the permanent fight against informal urban planning 20

1.4.5 Making the sustainable city a territory that now calls for the criminal responsibility of local officials and elected representatives 23

1.4.6 For a manifesto of African sustainable cities 24

1.4.7 Making the national urban policy (NUP) a tool for sustainable cities and the right to drinking water and decent sanitation 25

1.4.8 Making the national sanitation strategy a top priority in the process of building a sustainable city 26

1.4.9 The place of liquid sanitation in sustainable urban planning 27

1.4.10 Adopting a sustainable city approach to encourage the realization of liquid sanitation utilities 30

1.5 Conclusion 31

1.6 References 31

Chapter 2 The National Sanitation Policy in Tunisia: Successes and Limitations 33Rebei HEDI

2.1 Introduction 33

2.2 Urban liquid sanitation: Tunisia is ahead of the countries in the region 34

2.2.1 Early interest in urban sanitation 35

2.2.2 Evolution of sanitation indicators 36

2.2.3 Liquid sanitation in Tunisia: reasons for success 38

2.3 Wastewater treatment plants, a new polluter? 42

2.3.1 Aspects 42

2.3.2 Consequences 47

2.3.3 Case study 49

2.4 The necessary readjustments 53

2.4.1 ONASs strategy 54

2.4.2 Is a specialization of wastewater treatment plants possible? 55

2.4.3 Should the sewerage option be reviewed? 55

2.4.4 Opting for the circular economy? 56

2.5 Conclusion 58

2.6 References 59

Chapter 3 Cameroons National Liquid Sanitation Strategy: Critical Analysis and Proposals 63Esoh ELAMÉ

3.1 Background 63

3.2 Methodology 66

3.3 Theoretical framework 67

3.3.1 Strategic planning 67

3.3.2 Wastewater 69

3.4 Results 70

3.4.1 Existence of a national liquid sanitation strategy in Cameroon that is not based on a national urban policy 70

3.4.2 Existence of a national liquid sanitation strategy in Cameroon that is not based on a national sanitation policy 72

3.4.3 Cameroons national liquid sanitation strategy was the result of a mixed participatory process 74

3.4.4 Cameroons liquid sanitation strategic planning process undermines national sovereignty 75

3.4.5 Cameroons national liquid sanitation strategy lacks a "strategic vision" 75

3.4.6 The time horizon of Cameroons national sanitation strategy does not make it a strategy 76

3.4.7 The specific objectives of Cameroons national liquid sanitation strategy do not take collective sanitation into account 78

3.4.8 Improved sanitation facilities: not an appropriate long-term solution 81

3.4.9 Hygiene and sanitation promotion plans: an inappropriate solution 81

3.4.10 Cameroons national liquid sanitation strategy proposes technical solutions that are contrary to urban planning standards insofar as they encourage anarchic urbanization and urban sprawl 83

3.4.11 The strategys short-term action plan includes four outcomes that cannot be achieved in two years 85

3.4.12 The strategys medium-term action plan includes four outcomes that are difficult to achieve in five years 87

3.5 Conclusion 88

3.6 References 89

Chapter 4 State of Play of Non-Collective Sanitation in Cameroon and Compliance Solutions for Sustainable Urban Planning 93Esoh ELAMÉ and Jacques MARTEL

4.1 Introduction 93

4.2 Methodology 94

4.3 Results 95

4.3.1 Collective sanitation is totally absent in Cameroon 95

4.3.2 Cameroonian cities are dominated by autonomous sanitation of the informal type 97

4.3.3 Latrines are the most diffuse essential component of liquid sanitation in Cameroon 99

4.3.4 The distance between the latrines and the water points does not comply with WHO requirements: there is a risk of water table contamination 103

4.3.5 Proposing specific provisions on the depth of septic tanks and water wells 107

4.3.6 Reviewing the current legal framework for NCSs and clarifying the roles and missions of the different actors 108

4.3.7 The practice of zoning for liquid sanitation in Cameroonian cities is completely unknown 108

4.3.8 The role and missions of decentralized local authorities in liquid sanitation in Cameroon make them key actors in liquid sanitation in cities 110

4.3.9 Lack of a public sanitation service in Cameroonian cities 111

4.3.10 Cameroonian cities do not have a public sewage service 112

4.3.11 In the Cameroonian context, there is a lack of sizing and construction rules for the different types of NCS facilities 114

4.3.12 The treatment of septage is a major problem in Cameroonian cities that must be addressed 123

4.3.13 Enforcing the polluter pays principle by municipalities for liquid waste 132

4.4 Discussion 133

4.5 Conclusion 134

4.6 References 135

Chapter 5 Industrial Water Management in Sarh (Chad): Spatialization of Socio-Environmental Risks 139Yamingué BÉTINBAYE, Ngaressem Goltob MBAYE and Michel TCHOTSOUA

5.1 Introduction 139

5.2 Methods 140

5.2.1 Spatialization, socio-environmental risk and urban service 140

5.2.2 A dialectical approach to examining the management of industrial water in Sarh 142

5.3 Results 145

5.3.1 An economy centered on four industrial units 145

5.3.2 A health facility on the scale of industrial units 146

5.3.3 Water management in industrial units in Sarh 147

5.3.4 Water management at the Sarh regional hospital 151

5.3.5 Industrial water management model and socio-environmental risks 154

5.4 Discussion 156

5.5 Conclusion 157

5.6 References 158

Chapter 6 Summary Diagnosis of the Excreta and Domestic Wastewater Collection System in the District of Douala III (Cameroon) 161Esoh ELAMÉ, Moni Augustine NATHALIE, Tefounou Marco BIANNY and Jacques MARTEL

6.1 Introduction 161

6.2 Contextual framework of the study 162

6.3 Data collection 163

6.4 Results and discussions 165

6.4.1 The human capital of the Douala III district municipality does not allow for decent sanitation for the population 165

6.4.2 The incoherence of the urban fabric makes it difficult for people to access liquid sanitation 167

6.4.3 The spatial organization of the habitat does not promote decent sanitation in the district municipality of Douala III 169

6.4.4 Lack of modern technical solutions to treat domestic wastewater produced by households 171

6.4.5 Traditional latrines are the most commonly used domestic wastewater collection device in Douala III 173

6.4.6 The lack of a sanitation network in the Douala III district leads to the dumping of gray water in channels and streams 178

6.4.7 Lack of a municipal waste disposal service in the Douala III district 180

6.4.8 The construction of sanitation facilities in the district of Douala III is achieved without expertise 181

6.4.9 Industrial wastewater, as is the case with domestic wastewater, is not treated in the Douala III district 183

6.4.10 The commune of Douala III does not have a rainwater collection system 186

6.4.11 The sanitation facilities in Douala III produce significant environmental and health impacts 190

6.5 Conclusion 192

6.6 References 194

Chapter 7 The Public Sewerage System in the District Municipality of Douala I: Status of the Issue and Some Technical Guidelines 197Arnaud Akini DAMSOU, Esoh ELAMÉ and Jacques MARTEL

7.1 Introduction 197

7.2 Theoretical framework: the concept of a sanitation network 199

7.2.1 Definition of the sewerage system 199

7.2.2 The components of a sewerage system 200

7.2.3 Brief history of the sewerage system 201

7.3 Results 203

7.3.1 The legislative and regulatory texts that have existed in Cameroon to date have taken into account the concept of a public sewerage system in a mixed manner 203

7.3.2 To date, there is no public sewerage system in the city of Douala, and even less so in the district of Douala I 204

7.3.3 Liquid sanitation in the commune of Douala I is essentially autonomous 206

7.3.4 The municipality of Douala I has a fairly structured urban fabric that allows for the design of a public sewer system 208

7.3.5 The district municipality of Douala I includes functional neighborhoods likely to facilitate the establishment of a sanitation network 212

7.3.6 The geomorphology of the Douala I district municipality facilitates the installation of a public sewerage system 216

7.3.7 Physical characteristics of the water table in the Douala I district 218

7.3.8 There is little land available to accommodate public sewerage works in the Douala I district municipality 220

7.4 Conclusion 221

7.5 References 222

Conclusion 225Esoh ELAMÉ

List of Authors 229

Index 231

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