Justification In Sub-Saharan Africa, excreta and wastewater disposal is characterised primarily by on-site sanitation systems. This sanitation option is more likely to increase as governments, municipalities, communities, private operators and donor agencies strive to reach the Millennium Development Goals aimed at reducing by half the proportion of people without access to basic sanitation facilities. Due to increased urban population growth in Sub-Saharan Africa, the faecal sludge volumes will increase to alarming quantities in the coming decades. An evaluation of faecal sludge management practices reveals that the main shortcomings relate to the widespread lack of involvement and foresight by the municipalities, the paucity of effective legal provisions and organization, and the absence of stakeholder coordination. Stakeholder involvement for planning and implementing faecal sludge management is virtually inexistent or excluded from urban sanitation planning processes. In the majority of situations, faecal sludge management is financially not viable. This is a major cause of the indiscriminate dumping of faecal sludge in urban areas or its untreated use in urban agriculture. These practices not only pose permanent and serious health risks but also contaminate both scarce ground and surface water. Objective and general approach On the basis of these facts, which present a real challenge to sector specialists, the overall objective of our research is to develop an innovative strategic planning approach for sustainable faecal sludge management in urban areas which allows minimising public health and environmental risks. Focus is placed on developing a reproducible methodology for stakeholder involvement, on enhancing population awareness for improved faecal sludge disposal and attributing a leading role to the dynamic private faecal sludge emptying and transport operators. These aspects form the three pillars of our search for a comprehensive methodological approach. The municipality of Ouahigouya in Burkina Faso with a population of about 65'000 inhabitants was used as pilot site to launch, implement and scientifically validate the approach. Analysis and stakeholder involvement The stakeholder-based planning approach developed in Ouahigouya relies on a combination of stakeholder identification and analysis, and participatory planning techniques (focus groups, workshops, informal meetings, all-stakeholder workshops). A quantitative survey among households allowed collecting stakeholders' proposals and evaluating suggestions for improvement of faecal sludge management and neighbourhood hygiene proposed by the population. The main steps in the stakeholder involvement approach include: Jointly clarifying the objectives of the planning process together with the stakeholders; Identifying stakeholders and their interests; Classifying stakeholders according to their importance and influence based on defined criteria and confirmed by the stakeholders the
Christof Holliger, Aline Sondra Adler, Laetitia Janine Andrée Cardona, Jaspreet Singh Saini, Pilar Natalia Rodilla Ramírez, Ruizhe Pei