How water privatisation can work – Hon. Femi Akindele, Ekiti lawmaker
2026-02-12 - 10:58
The lawmaker representing Irepodun/ Irepodun Constituency 1 in Ekiti State House of Assembly, Hon. Femi Akindele, has explained how public-private partnership, PPP, in the water sector can work, noting that operating the sector fully as a public service will not ensure efficiency. Hon. Akindele made the point at the stakeholders’ awareness camp organised by the Ecumenical Water Network, EWN, Nigeria, as part of the Voices for Water Justice project, at the Institute of Church and Society, ICS, Samonda, Ibadan, Oyo State, on Thursday. The Ektiti lawmaker said: “It is not possible to totally provide free water. How this can work is that the elite and urban centres pay for water, while it’s subsidised for the rural communities.” Akindele gave an example of Ado, where rural residents were glad to pay for the metred water project, which was running effectively. “The only challenge right now is that major road construction damaged the pipes. As soon as roads are done, the water supply will resume,” he explained. The awareness camp Meanwhile, EWN Nigeria organised the awareness camp to strengthen dialogue and collaboration with government agencies, churches, labour unions, and allied institutions on water as a human right, public-public water service delivery, and policy engagement. Present at the engagement were the host, Very Rev. O. Kolade Fadahunsi, the Ecumenical Water Network, EWNA, Coordinator; members of the Amalgamated Union of Public Corporation, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees, AUPCTRE, from across South-West states; NGOs; the clergy, among others. Vanguard News