ICRRWASH-Nepal
Nepal,
ongoing
Securing more inclusive and climate-resilient WASH services for 41,200 people in the Dailekh and Sarlahi districts of Nepal.
Inclusive climate resilient rural WASH services – Nepal (ICRRWASH-Nepal) is part of an ongoing multi-country programme partnership with the Government of Australia’s Water for Women Fund implemented by SNV with partners in Bhutan, Lao PDR, and Nepal. Concluding in December 2024, ICRRWASH-Nepal contributes to advancing gender equality, disability and social inclusion, and people’s health and well-being by introducing area-wide and inclusive approaches to rural WASH development.
In collaboration with government partners, NGOs, rights holders’ organisations, UTS-ISF, IWMI, and CBM Australia, SNV’s ICRRWASH-Nepal project enhances local government (Rural Municipalities) capacity to manage gravity-fed systems in Dailekh and groundwater-based systems in Sarlahi, making them more resilient to climate change.
The project builds on SNV in Nepal's earlier success in enabling people’s access to basic hygiene services (99.1%) and water services (98.7%), reaching nearly everybody in both districts.
Local governance approaches and methodologies that leave no-one behind are at the heart of ICRRWASH-Nepal.
(1) Raising local governments’ understanding of the impacts of climate change on rural water and the capacity to respond in line with national government standards to:
engage in climate risk vulnerability assessments, climate risk-informed planning, budgeting, and implementation of resilient and area-wide water supply services across Nepal’s hills and plains.
work with water resource management tools and methodologies that help advance water security.
ensure the preservation and continuity of inclusive WASH gains in access and systems improvement, including training elected representatives to operationalise their respective Climate Resilient Water Supply strategies, 2022-30 and recently developed WASH Plan 2023.
(2) Promoting the broad application of gender equality, disability, and social inclusion (GEDSI) approaches by:
institutionalising spaces for the meaningful participation (and strengthened voice) of people with disabilities in WASH planning (e.g., by setting up disability help desks at local government).
mainstreaming GESI in local government WASH planning and budgeting, i.e., local government officials engaging in a GESI self-assessment tool and incorporating findings to improve inclusivity in rural water governance, annual planning, and budgeting processes.
increasing awareness of gender biases and stereotypes in the division of WASH labour and responsibilities within households and communities, e.g., by applying a WASH-GEM survey tool in applied research and documenting the disproportionate impacts of climate change and communities’ coping mechanisms.
enhancing local leaders’ capacity to address the differential impacts of climate change.
(3) Contributing to rural water development knowledge generation and practice by:
introducing approaches that strengthen local government leadership in driving climate-resilient WASH.
documenting inclusive and climate-resilient coping mechanisms by households and community-based groups, and
applying climate change risk and vulnerability analyses, to inform local adaptation plans and investments.