Rural water supply – a complexity perspective

This blog has originally been posted on ircwash.org.

How can the concept of learning in the rural water supply system in Uganda be conceptualized and modelled? This is the challenge I’ll be working on for the next 5 months at IRC. I’m a student at Delft University of Technology, following the master Systems Engineering, Policy Analysis, and Management. At my faculty, we learn to look at the intersections between technical systems and social systems and design for complex systems.

Complex vs. Complicated

Imagine a red car. Is this car complex or complicated? In common language, these words are often used interchangeably, but in the field of Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS) they represent different things. A red car is a complicated thing. It consists of thousands and thousands of little parts that are all in some way connected to each other in order for the car to move. Complicated.

Now imagine a person in the same red car in between hundreds of other cars. Complex or complicated? Right, complex. The person in the car has a destination, the person can be in a hurry, can be sad, tired, exhausted. The car next to it is similar: a person with a destination, a mood, and a route. All cars in traffic make decisions and the result of all these individual decisions and their interactions determine the outcome of the system: a flow of cars, a traffic jam, or even an accident.

Emergence in Complex Adaptive Systems (CAS)

Emergence is in my view the most interesting part of a CAS. Emergence is the phenomenon of interesting, non-obvious consequences of the interactions between things, in this case red cars, that make decisions. Take the traffic pattern occurring when cars decide to hit the brakes. Nothing special has to happen if one car decides to break. However, when there are many cars on the road that react on the action of that car then, minutes later, a traffic jam might emerge. The traffic jam, however, is not the result of the first car hitting the brakes. It is also caused by the next car hitting the brakes, and the next one, and every other interaction between all those cars on the road.

Observing the emergent properties of a system means observing the system as a whole. This is different to the more traditional perspective on systems thinking, where systems are decomposed and each part is analyzed in order to understand the working of a system. This would work very well in complicated systems. CAS theory tells us that you might lose very determining properties of a system when you decompose it. Back to the traffic example: decomposing the system to individual cars, for instance, makes it difficult to discover the cause of the traffic jam: cars that break in reaction to other cars breaking.

WASHCost Share quick start

This blog has originally been posted on ircwash.org. The tools mentioned in the blog are accessible from the original post. 

Access and share life-cycle costs quickly

Before getting started

WASHCost Share is a tool to access the cost of water and sanitation services based on shared data. Use the tool to access reports and to make this information available to end-users, service providers and governments and to start to plan for sustainable services. Access the tool through the basic and advanced shared reports under “Useful links”.

The tool is based on the life-cycle costs approach developed by IRC to establish the real cost of water and sanitation services.

This tool will help users consider:

  • Initial setup costs as well as recurrent expenditures (per person per year).
  • Life-cycle costs compared to the level of service in a service area
  • Data on the cost household sanitation and public water supplies in the service area.

Please ensure you have internet access and visit the shared report using the internet address of the report.

To know more about the life-cycle costs approach, use the resources at the end of this article. If you have a specific question about the life-cycle costs approach or the tool after reading this document, please use the KnowledgePoint support service or follow the Costing Sustainable Service training.

The tool includes household sanitation and public water supplies.
Report creation page

Register an account

Before you can share reports and save them to your dashboard, register an account by simply clicking on one of the shared reports at the bottom of this page or use the “Sign In” button in the upper right-hand corner of the screen.

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