Alternative Sanitation and Strategic Directives for the Well Water Security in Cotonou (Benin) and Lomé (Togo)
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Abstract
In the coastal cities of West Africa, land use change, rapid population growth,
bad sanitation systems and poor environmental governance degrade the quality of groundwater. This study aimed to assess alternative, acceptable, affordable sanitation disposal and practices for groundwater quality rehabilitation
in the cities of Cotonou and Lomé. The study was based on the participatory
transdisciplinary approach, field surveys, feedback from interactions with
stakeholders, experiences of the practitioners and institutional consultations.
This multi-stakeholder approach helped to appreciate ecological aspects of
sanitation disposal and its implications on water quality improvement. SWOT
model was used to analyze the relevance of assessed ecological system. Well
water quality is deteriorated by traditional waste management disposal. Ecological sanitation systems are septic tanks on polyethylene, above-ground latrines and phytoremediation technique in the swamp areas. Collected wastes
are used for composting and biogas production. Based on the optimist scenario at 2030 horizon, kind success factors of groundwater security are participation of citizens, existence of sanitation market, valorization of the waste by
category, low-cost disposal adaptable to the individual, household and neighborhood’s scales. The strategic directions rely on funding and public policies
for WASH, ecological sanitation disposal, cultural environment and good sanitation practices for emergence of new sanitation system to secure and sustain well water quality. But the social acceptability of ecological disposal is limited by the society’s multicultural heritage. These findings could help in deision-making concerning urban groundwater quality protection in the African coastal cities.
