Data | |
---|---|
Water coverage (broad definition) | (improved water source) 82% (2011)[1] |
Sanitation coverage (broad definition) | (improved sanitation) 70% (2011)[1] |
Continuity of supply | 50% |
Average urban water use (L/person/day) | n/a |
Average urban water and sanitation tariff (US$/m3) | US$ |
Share of household metering | very high |
Annual investment in WSS | $22 per capita (2005) |
Share of self-financing by utilities | low |
Share of tax-financing | n/a |
Share of external financing | high |
Institutions | |
Decentralization to municipalities | Yes, for larger cities |
National water and sanitation company | Yes, for bulk water supply and small towns |
Water and sanitation regulator | None |
Responsibility for policy setting | Ministry of Energy, Mines, Water and Environment |
Sector law | Water resources law, but no specific law for water supply and sanitation |
No. of urban service providers | 17 (ONEE, 4 private operators and 12 local utilities) |
No. of rural service providers | n/a |
Water supply and sanitation in Morocco is provided by a wide array of utilities. They range from private companies in the largest city, Casablanca, the capital, Rabat, Tangier, and Tetouan, to public municipal utilities in 13 other cities, as well as a national electricity and water company (ONEE). The latter is in charge of bulk water supply to the aforementioned utilities, water distribution in about 500 small towns, as well as sewerage and wastewater treatment in 60 of these towns.
There have been substantial improvements in access to water supply, and to a lesser extent to sanitation, over the past fifteen years.[when?] Remaining challenges include a low level of wastewater treatment (only 13% of collected wastewater is being treated), lack of house connections in the poorest urban neighborhoods, and limited sustainability of rural systems (20 percent of rural systems are estimated not to function). In 2005 a National Sanitation Program was approved that aims at treating 60% of collected wastewater and connecting 80% of urban households to sewers by 2020. The issue of lack of water connections for some of the urban poor is being addressed as part of the National Human Development Initiative, under which residents of informal settlements have received land titles and have fees waived that are normally paid to utilities in order to connect to the water and sewer network.
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