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A qualitative study on resource barriers facing scaled container-based sanitation service chains
Author(s) -
Charlie Ferguson,
Adrian Mallory,
Fiona Anciano,
Kory Russell,
Hellen López Valladares,
Joy Riungu,
Alison Parker
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
journal of water sanitation and hygiene for development
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2408-9362
pISSN - 2043-9083
DOI - 10.2166/washdev.2022.218
Subject(s) - sanitation , container (type theory) , service (business) , business , resource (disambiguation) , environmental economics , supply chain , process management , industrial organization , operations management , risk analysis (engineering) , computer science , marketing , engineering , economics , mechanical engineering , computer network , environmental engineering
Container-based sanitation (CBS) is an increasingly recognised form of off-grid sanitation provision appropriate for impoverished urban environments. To ensure a safely managed and sustainable service, a managing organisation must implement a service chain that performs robustly and cost-effectively, even with an expanding customer base. These ‘CBS operators’ adopt varying approaches to achieve this objective. Following research including interviews with representatives from six current CBS operators, this paper presents a generalised diagrammatic model of a CBS service chain and discusses the three broad thematic challenges currently faced by these organisations. Supplying cover material is a universal problem with hidden challenges when taking advantage of freely available resources. There is no universally applicable approach for the efficient collection of faecal waste despite the high labour costs of waste collection. The best strategy depends on the CBS operator's overall expansion strategy and the location of fixed features within the served community. Although CBS is technically well-suited to being turned into new products within the circular economy, in practice, this requires a diverse range of skills from CBS operators and is hampered by slow growth in other organic waste recovery services and unhelpful regulation.

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