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ELDOWAS

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Intermodal Africa

Intermodal Africa

THE KEY TO LIFE

Eldoret Water and Sanitation Company (ELDOWAS) maintains vital water services to Eldoret Municipality and environs in Uasin Gishu County, Kenya. We speak to Peter Kibet arap Biwott, Managing Director, about the company’s life changing work in supply, water and sanitation

Writer: Marcus Kääpä | Project Manager: Jordan Levey

Filthy water cannot be washed.

An African proverb birthing multiple connotations, it is also a truth of sorts.

In a literal sense, this saying has been a reality for much of human history to the present day, with dirty water often having to be boiled in order to be safe to drink and use, especially in the face of rising contaminant levels following the impact of industry over the centuries.

Thankfully, this historical truth is changing due to modern technology, and because the reality of water’s importance also goes hand in hand with another proverb - one of Kenyan origin - Water is the king of food.

This East African saying sums up the simple necessity of water, Biwott, Managing Director of the company. “We are the second largest of the 91 water service providers in Kenya when it comes to asset and client base. In our water supply process, we carry out water tests through our network of ISO certified laboratories, and we also carry out meter testing services as well as capacity building services to our clients and staff.”

and a truth often taken for granted by people around the world; that water is the key to life. Embodying the importance of water to the core, ELDOWAS, the Eldoret Water and Sanitation Company, understands this.

“ELDOWAS’ mandate is water safety, sanitation and catchment conservation, and we ensure water for all,” introduces Peter Kibet arap

Based in Eldoret (Uasin Gishu County), around 320 kilometres west of Kenya’s capital Nairobi, ELDOWAS’ service area covers the Eldoret town as well as the municipality as a whole. It also includes the water source community and other small towns such as Kesses and Lessos, respectively in Uasin Gishu, Elgeyo Marakwet and Nandi Counties.

“Our client base numbers approximately 600,000 customers when it comes to both water and sewerage connectivity,” continues Biwott. “We have a water supply coverage of 80 percent while our sewerage sees connectivity of around 40 percent across the areas. Upon completion of the last mile project, the coverage will move to over 65 percent.

“ELDOWAS’ Kenyan target is 100 percent coverage both in water and sanitation by 2030, and our employees number more than 360 across both contract and permanent basis.”

AIDING NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT

According to Biwott, the company’s mission is to become Kenya’s most customer-centric company,

INDUSTRY EXPERIENCE

Biwott has over 17 years of experience in both private and public sectors, and holds a deeply rooted passion for aiding the development of people’s lives and bettering services in places that need them. He has worked with multiple organisations to achieve this development, including:

1. Ministry of Planning

2. Ministry of Trade and Industry

3. Kenya Institute for public policy, research and analysis (KIPPRA)

4. Kerio Valley Development Authority (KVDA)

5. Commission on Revenue Allocation (CRA)

6. Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KNCCI)

7. Kenya Association of Manufacturers (KAM)

8. Dubai Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI)

9. Export Promotion Council (EPC)

10. Kenya Export Promotion and Branding Agency (KEPROBA)

11. Eldoret Water and Sanitation Company Ltd embodied by its brand promise to enhance the quality of life in the country. The Kenya Vision 2030 seeks to enhance the quality and quantity of life so our water and sanitation services play a critical role in this regard.

“The industry in Kenya itself is advanced and a good place to be operating in,” Biwott tells us. “The sector is spearheaded by the government’s Ministry of Water & Sanitation (MoWS), under which there is the regulator for the whole water and sanitation utilities sector namely Water Services Regulatory Board (WASREB). The utility regulator develops a city or municipality tariff for water and sanitation which is implemented for five years. The utility, however, is a company owned by the local county government of Uasin Gishu in Kenya.

“ELDOWAS therefore operates under the county of Uasin Gishu. This makes it even more interesting

01

Energy

• Smart Energy Management • Smart Energy & Gas Meters

• Solarization of Water Pumping

02

IoT

About Earthview

About Earthview

Earthview is a technology company focused on the development of IoT and Smart Technologies to enhance operational efficiency and revenue collection in Utilities We target online real time measurements, monitoring, billing, data analytics and forecasting Earthview’s technologies are locally developed to seamlessly Earthview is a integrate with available smart objects and other third party utility system.technology company focused on the development of IoT and Smart Technologies to enhance operational efficiency and revenue collection in Utilities. We target online real-time measurements, monitoring, billing, data analytics and forecasting. Earthview’s technologies are locally developed to seamlessly integrate with available smart objects and other third party utility systems.

Our Business 01

03

Water02 03

04

Software

Energy

• E-billing • Meter Data Management System (MDMS)

▪ Smart Energy

Management ▪ Smart Energy & Gas

Meters ▪ Solarization of Water

Pumping

• LIMS

• E-Permitting

IoT

Water

• Smart Utilities Management ▪ E-billing ▪ Meter Data

Management • Distribution Management System(MDMS) ▪ LIMS ▪ E-Permitting • Abstraction Management

▪ Smart Utilities

Management ▪ Distribution Management ▪ Abstraction Management ▪ Smart Water Meters (Prepaid/Post paid) ▪ Smart Water ATMs

• Smart Water Meters (Prepaid/Post Paid) Software 04 ▪ E-billing ▪ Meter Data • Smart Water ATMs Management System(MDMS) ▪ LIMS ▪ E-Permitting • E-billing • Meter Data Management System (MDMS) • LIMS

• E-Permitting

Nicholson Court, Nicholson Drive, off Ngong Rd, Nrb Kenya I +25494020900 I info@earthview.co.ke INicholson Court, Nicholson Drive, off Ngong Rd, Nrb-Kenya I +25494020900 I www.earthview.co.ke www.earthview.co.ke

info@earthview.co.ke

because as an institution, it gives us the mandate to be part of the County Integrated Development Plan (CIDP) which is a blueprint for local economic development.”

At the same time, this ensures that ELDOWAS fully adheres to the regulatory framework and national policy envisaged in the Kenya Vision 2030, where the country aspires to ensure a high quality and quantity of life for all Kenyans. Within this sphere, the water and sanitation sector is a critical contributor to human development and is a key global priority, as it is an enabler for economic transformation.

“It is very exciting to be part of local organisations helping in the realisation of such agendas,” Biwott says. “In line with this, our membership to the UN Global Compact network positions ELDOWAS as a key player in the Kenyan and global utility sphere, thanks to the company’s efforts in delivering water and sanitation services across three counties in North Rift region in Kenya.

“The UN Global Compact network provides an avenue for partnerships and networks towards the realisation of sustainable development goals (SDGs). Most importantly, joining the network enables ELDOWAS to focus on the key priority areas as part of our sustainability strategy.”

The primary reasons behind this are to ensure ELDOWAS implements global corporate principles, or more specifically, the Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact derived from: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the International Labour Organization’s Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, the Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, and the United Nations Convention Against Corruption.

“Corporate sustainability starts with a company’s value system and a principles-based approach to doing

ELDOWAS MISSION AND VALUES AT A GLANCE

ELDOWAS’ mission remains its commitment to provide adequate quality water and sanitation services efficiently for all people within its regions of operation. This is achieved through energised and passionate employees working together and supported by innovations in the industry.

Company core values:

1. Customer Focus

2. Team Players

3. Trusted

4. Professional

5. Inspiring

ELDOWAS

VISION 2030 AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS (SDGS)

Vision 2030 recognises that water is a basic need and an important enabler or catalyst for both the economic and social development of Kenya. It is important, therefore, to provide water services in sufficient quantity and quality and view water as both an economic and social good.

The national development goal on water service provision under Vision 2030 states “water and sanitation to ensure that improved water and sanitation are available to all by 2030”.

The targets are:

1. Increasing water supply coverage to 100 percent both in urban and rural areas.

2. Increasing coverage of piped water supply by registered

WSPs to 100 percent for urban populations.

3. Increasing unit water supply amount suitable to national standard levels.

4. Decreasing NRW rate to 20 percent for efficient water use.

The target for sewerage development is to increase the coverage rate of the sewerage system to 80 percent for urban populations, and ELDOWAS is at the centre of this. business. This means operating in ways that, at a minimum, meet fundamental responsibilities in the areas of human rights, labour, environment and anti-corruption.

“Responsible businesses enact the same values and principles wherever they have a presence, and know that good practices in one area do not offset harm in another. By incorporating the 10 Principles of the UN Global Compact into strategies, policies and procedures, and establishing a culture of integrity, companies are not only upholding their basic responsibilities to people and planet, but also setting the stage for long-term success.”

PEOPLE-CENTRIC PURPOSE

As a company that revolves around welfare and bettering the lives of people in Kenya, it is no surprise that ELDOWAS also undertakes many corporate social responsibility (CSR) practices to help further its peoplecentric mission.

“We carry out CSR activities, for example the distribution of water tanks to schools within our service area,” Biwott explains. “We have also initiated LindaMajiInitiative/ LindaMajiViwandani, which helps educate our residents on water conservation at their homes and in their businesses, such as manufacturing firms, because our region is water deficient at the moment. We also sensitise on the proper use of flush toilets so as to make wastewater treatment simple, efficient and affordable.

“In addition, we provide tree seedlings towards catchment conservation, and customer sensitisation and engagement as part of our company service. We are embarking on creating sustainability in our company, in part, by adopting green energy where we hope to install solar systems to power our water treatment plant in Kipkaren and also for use in our offices to save on energy.”

Within Kenya, ELDOWAS’ water catchment area spans approximately 177,000 hectares, including a protected forest area of 85,000 hectares. According to Biwott, among external economic activities and population pressure, the watershed has been degraded over the years. As a result, this affects the quality and quantity of the water supplied to the citizens, which calls for climate action activities to restore the watershed in ELDOWAS’ quest to make the Eldoret municipality a sustainable city in Kenya.

“We have developed two tree nurseries where, in conjunction with

the community, we jointly carry out the reforestation of our watershed,” Biwott elaborates. “We do this in partnership with institutions such as Family Bank, who are the main title sponsor for our climate action activities, Uasin Gishu County Government, Equity Bank, National Bank, the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Kenya Forest Service, the members of Kenya Association of Manufacturers, members of the Kenya National Chamber of Commerce and Industry, among other private and public sector agencies and development partners.

“We have this year planted over 125,000 tree seedlings and continue to do so. We do this in support of the Eldoret City Climate Action Marathon that, since its inception five years ago, has rallied the residents of Eldoret and Kenyans at large to plant over 10 million trees. We are therefore committed to contributing to the mitigation of climate change through the restoration of our water catchment areas.”

BETTERING KENYA

For ELDOWAS, the future looks bright. The company is currently carrying out a project that, when concluded, will cover 47 kilometres of sewerage connectivity.

This project will cover a large part of Eldoret and is expected to increase ELDOWAS’ coverage to over 65 percent in the entire area. This sewerage project is key to the future of Eldoret’s water and sanitation needs.

“On top of this, our CSR activities are ramping up,” Biwott tells us. “Some of the priorities include a reduction in operations costs by adopting green energy, ensuring that we reduce non-revenue water from 39 percent to 20 percent in the next three years, and improve on customer service by ensuring improvement of our services, all to become the most Tel: +254 (0)53-2035000 info@eldowas.or.ke www.eldowas.or.ke

customer-centric company in Kenya.

“Additionally, this will include the adoption of advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) or increased SMART metering solutions, improvements on water and sanitation access by all, working towards 100 percent coverage in the country, improving working conditions for workers and enhancing their motivation, increasing forest coverage in our area to enhance quality and quantity of water to our hometown, and finally to emerge as the best water service provider in Kenya - and in Africa - as a whole.”

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