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    Turn up the Dial: System Dynamics Modeling of Resource Allocations toward Rural Water Supply Maintenance in East Africa

    Source: Journal of Environmental Engineering:;2022:;Volume ( 148 ):;issue: 004::page 04022006
    Author:
    Anna Libey
    ,
    Pranav Chintalapati
    ,
    Styvers Kathuni
    ,
    Bernard Amadei
    ,
    Evan Thomas
    DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0001982
    Publisher: ASCE
    Abstract: Water stress is increasingly affecting hundreds of millions of people around the world. In East Africa, severe and persistent drought periods negatively impact health and livelihoods. Drought increases reliance on mechanized boreholes to extract groundwater. However, without adequate resource allocations, effective monitoring of borehole functionality, and reliable maintenance service, breakdown rates increase and downtimes last many months. Our study applies system dynamics modeling to investigate the effects of allocating resources to borehole maintenance and repair in the Afar Region in Ethiopia and Turkana County in Kenya. We inform model calibration with runtime and functionality estimates derived from sensors installed on 245 boreholes and apply sensitivity analyses varying budget allocations to optimize for functionality. We conclude that increasing the borehole repair and maintenance budgets in Turkana from the current 30% to 85% of available budgets could result in an additional 83 working boreholes and 95% functionality in 2030. In Afar, increasing maintenance budgets from 38% to 79% could result in functionality levels of 75% by 2030, well above currently projected levels of 54%.
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      Turn up the Dial: System Dynamics Modeling of Resource Allocations toward Rural Water Supply Maintenance in East Africa

    URI
    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4283177
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    • Journal of Environmental Engineering

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    contributor authorAnna Libey
    contributor authorPranav Chintalapati
    contributor authorStyvers Kathuni
    contributor authorBernard Amadei
    contributor authorEvan Thomas
    date accessioned2022-05-07T20:59:59Z
    date available2022-05-07T20:59:59Z
    date issued2022-01-31
    identifier other(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0001982.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4283177
    description abstractWater stress is increasingly affecting hundreds of millions of people around the world. In East Africa, severe and persistent drought periods negatively impact health and livelihoods. Drought increases reliance on mechanized boreholes to extract groundwater. However, without adequate resource allocations, effective monitoring of borehole functionality, and reliable maintenance service, breakdown rates increase and downtimes last many months. Our study applies system dynamics modeling to investigate the effects of allocating resources to borehole maintenance and repair in the Afar Region in Ethiopia and Turkana County in Kenya. We inform model calibration with runtime and functionality estimates derived from sensors installed on 245 boreholes and apply sensitivity analyses varying budget allocations to optimize for functionality. We conclude that increasing the borehole repair and maintenance budgets in Turkana from the current 30% to 85% of available budgets could result in an additional 83 working boreholes and 95% functionality in 2030. In Afar, increasing maintenance budgets from 38% to 79% could result in functionality levels of 75% by 2030, well above currently projected levels of 54%.
    publisherASCE
    titleTurn up the Dial: System Dynamics Modeling of Resource Allocations toward Rural Water Supply Maintenance in East Africa
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume148
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Environmental Engineering
    identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)EE.1943-7870.0001982
    journal fristpage04022006
    journal lastpage04022006-10
    page10
    treeJournal of Environmental Engineering:;2022:;Volume ( 148 ):;issue: 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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