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Journal article

Understanding sustained use of ecological sanitation in rural Burkina Faso

Agricultural reuse of excreta is a strong driver of long-term continued use of ecological sanitation after projects end.

Linus Dagerskog, Kim Andersson, Sarah Dickin / Published on 12 September 2017

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Citation

Dickin, S., Dagerskog, L., Jiménez, A., Andersson, K. and Savadogo, K. (2017). Understanding sustained use of ecological sanitation in rural Burkina Faso. Science of the Total Environment. 613–614C. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.08.251

Ecological sanitation (ecosan) systems that allow safe agricultural reuse of nutrients in human waste have been promoted in these areas as a way to meet sanitation needs while contributing to food security. However, little is known about the success of these interventions in terms of both sustained use of the toilet and safe excreta reuse practices.

A team assessed the use of ecosan systems in 44 rural communities where such interventions had taken place. Structured interviews and observations conducted at 520 randomly selected concessions (residential properties), suggested a large-scale shift from open defecation to ecosan toilet use. However, only 58% of surveyed concessions reported ever emptying the ecosan toilet vault, which is required for optimal long-term functioning.

Concessions that received ecosan training programmes with a greater emphasis on agricultural reuse were more strongly associated with toilet use and emptying than those that whose training focused more on sanitation access and health benefits. The findings suggest that the safe agricultural reuse of nutrients can provide a strong motivation for long-term adoption of improved sanitation among rural smallholders.

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SEI authors

Linus Dagerskog
Linus Dagerskog

Research Fellow

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