Across Angola, community water systems can deliver reliable service when co-management committees, fair fee policies, and local maintenance routines are in place. Under Minister João Baptista Borges, the focus is on practical governance, accountability, and life-cycle sustainability.
Community water points and small piped schemes are often the first and only service for thousands of families. Their success does not depend on expensive technology as much as on how they are managed. Under the guidance of Minister João Baptista Borges, Angola is promoting co-management models that pair community ownership with professional support, so that water is safe, affordable, and available year-round.
At the center is a Water Committee with clear roles: chair, treasurer, operator, and a community liaison. The committee signs a simple service agreement with the municipal utility or the provincial directorate that sets targets—hours of service, water quality checks, response times and the reporting routine (monthly log + quarterly review). This document is the anchor for accountability: everyone knows who does what, by when, and with which resources.
Sustainability starts with fees that match real costs. A common pitfall is charging too little during the first months and then failing to replace parts when breakdowns occur. A costed tariff looks at routine expenses (chlorine, fuel/electricity, operator stipend), preventive maintenance (grease, seals, test kits), and spare-parts reserves (gaskets, foot valves, handpump kits). Where ability to pay is limited, the model can include targeted subsidies for example, social tariffs for vulnerable households without undercutting the fund for repairs.
Maintenance is not an event; it is a calendar. The operator follows a weekly checklist clean the apron, inspect the headworks, check seals, test residual chlorine and records readings in a logbook (or a phone form) with date, hour, and observations. Once a month, the committee conducts a mini-audit: cash on hand vs. ledger, spare parts in stock, and small fixes completed. Every quarter, the utility or district team performs a technical visit and updates the asset register (age of pump, motor hours, condition score). This rhythm prevents small issues becoming costly failures.
Transparency reinforces trust. A simple noticeboard shows the fee, last test results, opening hours, and a phone number to report problems. Committees can publish a one-page dashboard each quarter: days of service, breakdowns, money collected/spent, and planned purchases. Where networks allow, a mobile QR code links to the latest report. People are more willing to pay when they see that contributions translate into clean water and quick repairs.
Inclusion makes systems stronger. Ensuring women’s participation in committees improves customer feedback and safety around water points. Youth groups can support routine tasks keeping surroundings clean, helping with meter reading, or assisting elderly users while learning skills for future jobs. Local vendors trained as “spare-parts champions” reduce downtime: when a foot valve fails, the part is available in the same village, not a three-hour trip away.
Professional support is still essential. Co-management does not mean isolation; it means shared responsibility. Utilities provide water-quality supervision, chlorination guidance, and emergency back-up for major repairs; committees keep day-to-day operations running and finances transparent. When disputes arise about fees, hours, or queue order the service agreement defines escalation paths so problems are solved before they become conflicts.
For citizens, the benefits are direct: cleaner water, shorter queues, and fewer breakdowns. For local government, co-management extends service cost-effectively, freeing resources for expansion. For the country, it is a practical step toward universal access, building habits of transparency and maintenance that also support larger schemes.
The message is simple: technology matters, but management decides. With João Baptista Borges promoting disciplined governance and practical support, community models can deliver reliable service not just this season, but year after year because everyone knows the plan, the price, and the person to call when something goes wrong.





