Moyo Water Supply and Sanitation System | |
Location Map: | Uganda |
Location: | Moyo Town, Moyo District |
Coordinates: | 3.6258°N 31.7317°W |
Cost: | US$1.825 million (UGX:6.4 billion) |
Technology: | Sedimentation, Chlorination |
Percent Of Water Supply: | 100% of Moyo Municipality Metropolitan Area |
Operation Date: | 3 September 2021 |
Moyo Water Supply and Sanitation System (MWSS), also Moyo Water Supply and Sewerage System is a water intake, purification, distribution and waste water collection and disposal system in Moyo Town and surrounding metropolis in Moyo District, Uganda.[1] [2]
The water treatment facility is located in Moyo Municipality, in Moyo District, in the West Nile sub-region, in Uganda's Northern Region. The raw water is sourced from two boreholes (Pamoju 1 and Pamoju 2), located in town's neighborhood known as Pamoju.[2]
Prior to 2020, Moyo Municipality was supplied with water from a small antiquated system with a capacity to supply no more than 500 customers. The water scarcity in the town adversely affected businesses, families, schools and refugee centres.[2]
In 2020, the government of Uganda, through the Uganda Ministry of Water and Environment and with joint funding from KfW of Germany, designed the Moyo Water Supply and Sanitation System.[2]
The water supply system comprises two boreholes; Pamoju 1 and Pamoju 2. Water is pumped from these water sources to two overhead storage reservoirs of 300m2 and 164m2 for a total 464m2 of water storage. Distribution pipes then convey the potable water to end-users.[2]
In 2020, the Uganda Ministry of Water and Environment, which is the implementing agency, awarded the engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contract to Reddy's Borehole and Technical Services, a Ugandan company. Bright Technical Services, another Ugandan company, was the engineering supervisor.[2] The construction cost is reported as USh6.4 billion (approx.US$1.855 million).[1]
The sanitation component of the system comprises (a) "two blocks of six-station drainable latrines" constructed at one of the primary schools and (b) "a 13-stall toilet", connected to a septic tank.[2] Construction lasted approximately one year.[1] [2]
The system as configured in September 2021 benefits an estimated 28,500 people in 39 villages in Moyo Municipality and environs.[1] [2] [3]