Nepal and ADB
ADB supports Nepal’s green, resilient, and inclusive development strategy by investing in infrastructure, improving access to basic services, and protecting poor and vulnerable people from disaster and climate risks.
Projects supported by ADB are making a positive impact on people's lives. Explore the results of our programs in Nepal, gain insight into our partnerships for expanding access to water and sanitation services, and learn more about how our projects are improving people's lives and well-being.
The projects include the Nepal Small Towns Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Projects and Urban Water Supply and Sanitation Project, which aim to deliver water and sanitation to a total of 1.24 million people in urban centers across Nepal.
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Rapidly growing urban populations are increasing demand for reliable water supply.
At the turn of the 21st century, many people living in small towns and urban municipalities across Nepal lacked access to clean and safe water. Rapid urbanization aggravated the problem as the supply of new infrastructure for water supply services failed to keep pace with surging demand.
About 42% of the country’s population was urban in 2015, and this is projected to rise to 50% by 2030. As small urban centers continue to multiply, more and more households must be connected to reliable water supply and sanitation systems. Previous attempts to provide these services have suffered from poor sustainability and lack of community participation and ownership.
Women in Nepal traditionally manage the household. With that responsibility comes the task of ensuring that that family has enough water for washing, drinking, eating, and taking care of crops and livestock.
Carrying the heavy gagri in their arms, women, and sometimes children, in small towns across Nepal often trek up to two hours on foot to collect water from communal tubewells or rivers. Some do this up to six times a day, everyday.
Women and girls in Nepal are usually saddled with the responsibility of collecting water for their households. More often than not, it takes hours of walking, queuing, and carrying heavy gagris or other water containers back and forth. (Use the side arrows to toggle between photos)
In urban Nepal, communal tubewells are the main source of water for daily consumption. Unfiltered and untreated, water from these tubewells are often contaminated.
In urban Nepal, communal tubewells are the main source of water for daily consumption. Unfiltered and untreated, water from these tubewells are often contaminated.
The gagri is an aluminum or copper-based water container that weighs around 5 kilograms and can hold about 15 liters of water.
The gagri is an aluminum or copper-based water container that weighs around 5 kilograms and can hold about 15 liters of water.
Women in urban Nepal often leave their homes at the crack of dawn to trek upaved roads and mountainsides to reach communal tubewells and other water sources.
Women in urban Nepal often leave their homes at the crack of dawn to trek upaved roads and mountainsides to reach communal tubewells and other water sources.
Some travel up to 2 hours to communal tubewells and line up for another hour or so during peak collecting times.
Some travel up to 2 hours to communal tubewells and line up for another hour or so during peak collecting times.
Some collect water up to 6 times a day, everyday, to ensure that their household has enough water for their daily needs, such as cooking, cleaning, and bathing.
Some collect water up to 6 times a day, everyday, to ensure that their household has enough water for their daily needs, such as cooking, cleaning, and bathing.
Some place their full gagris in woven baskets to make carrying the heavy containers easier.
Some place their full gagris in woven baskets to make carrying the heavy containers easier.
Children, at times, help our their mothers by collecting water before and after school. They often miss school or arrive late.
Children, at times, help our their mothers by collecting water before and after school. They often miss school or arrive late.
Asha, a clothes shop owner in Ilam District, carries a gagri full of water back to her home.
Asha, a clothes shop owner in Ilam District, carries a gagri full of water back to her home.
Sita Bhudjel from Katari used to fetch water from a tubewell downhill. After getting their own water connection, she now has more time for chores and leisure.
Sita Bhudjel from Katari used to fetch water from a tubewell downhill. After getting their own water connection, she now has more time for chores and leisure.
Sita, who recently acquired her very own piped water connection, now has farm animals to earn more income.
Sita, who recently acquired her very own piped water connection, now has farm animals to earn more income.
Recognizing the adverse impact of inadequate drinking water supply and poor sanitation conditions on human development, the Government of Nepal initiated the three-phased, 15-year Development Plan for Water Supply and Sanitation in Small Towns.
With ADB’s support, the Department of Water Supply and Sewerage has been implementing the Small Towns Water Supply and Sanitation Sector Projects and the Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Sector) Project for the last 20 years to provide much-needed infrastructure and services to urban municipalities across the country.
The projects employ the small towns model—a cost-sharing system that promotes a sense of ownership and responsibility among communities by encouraging them to contribute to the capital, operation, and management of the services.
The importance of providing clean, reliable water to the small towns, from a community leader, a government partner, and ADB.
Vice Chairperson
Water Users Committee
Indrapur, Morang District
Binda, who has been vice-chair of the Indrapur Water Users’ Committee since 2015, knows that women and girls shoulder the task of collecting water and using it for household chores. This is why she is happy that women like her are given a voice in decision-making and are helping to run the water supply services in their community.
Project Director
Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Sector) Project
Ministry of Water Supply and Sanitation
Government of Nepal
With urbanization in Nepal came the rising demand for safe water supply for growing communities. Bidya Nath Bhattarai, the director of the Urban Water Supply and Sanitation (Sector) Project, shares the importance of government–community partnerships in making access to piped water supply universal.
Senior Planning and Policy Specialist
ADB
Alexandra Vogl discusses the introduction of the service provision model in the Nepal Small Towns Water Supply and Sanitation Sector projects in Nepal, and the crucial role of communities in ensuring the water supply system is managed sustainably.
Around 1.24 million people across 90 small towns and urban municipalities in Nepal are benefiting from high-quality, sustainable water and sanitation services. Infrastructure improvements come with comprehensive capacity building programs that enable Water User Committees to manage their community's water supply and sanitation services sustainably and effectively.