3 research outputs found
Capital and Operating Costs of Full-Scale Fecal Sludge Management and Wastewater Treatment Systems in Dakar, Senegal
A financial comparison of a parallel sewer based (SB)
system with
activated sludge, and a fecal sludge management (FSM) system with
onsite septic tanks, collection and transport (C&T) trucks, and
drying beds was conducted. The annualized capital for the SB (4.05 capita<sup>–1</sup> year<sup>–1</sup>), the annual operating cost for the SB (7.58
capita<sup>–1</sup> year<sup>–1</sup>), and the combined
capital and operating for the SB (11.63
capita<sup>–1</sup> year<sup>–1</sup>). In Dakar, costs
for SB are almost entirely borne by the sanitation utility, with only
6% of the annualized cost borne by users of the system. In addition
to costing less overall, FSM operates with a different business model,
with costs spread among households, private companies, and the utility.
Hence, SB was 40 times more expensive to implement for the utility
than FSM. However, the majority of FSM costs are borne at the household
level and are inequitable. The results of the study illustrate that
in low-income countries, vast improvements in sanitation can be affordable
when employing FSM, whereas SB systems are prohibitively expensive