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Service quality regulationSQ1ADefine service quality standards and indicators for operators

Regulating service quality entails establishment of criteria that services should meet to adequately reflect consumer needs and require operator’s full comprehension and acknowledgement.

Some of these measures may include, for instance, reliability of services, quality of water delivered, interruption frequency and its duration, average time to restore the service, or the number of consumer complaints.

This non-exhaustive list, open to be customized in different circumstances, becomes an essential tool for achieving the quality of service objectives and results associated with them. Each regulator, therefore, defines and calculates a set of performance indicators, which are then published, with results being compared in the sector annual assessment report.

Expected outcomes

  • Clear and transparent sanitation and water service quality standards are measured on all service operators.
  • Different performance trends are compared.
  • Consumer associations actively participate and can access the established norms at any time.
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Objective: Define service requirements to be met by operators
Area:
Service quality regulation
Cost:
Low
Frequency:
Regular
Target group:
Regulators, Service operators, Consumer associations
Region:
Eastern Africa, Australia and New Zealand, Latin America and the Caribbean
Date:
Oct 13, 2022

Examples

Uruguay

The Energy and Water Services Regulator of Uruguay (URSEA) has the legal authority to request that service providers submit the information required for the performance of their functions. Accordingly, URSEA issued Resolution No. 83 of 2009 regulating the delivery of accounting information for regulatory purposes in the drinking water and sanitation sector. The information to be provided, in addition to accounting information, defines the basic statistical information to be reported by providers, including 54 indicators that are divided into the following categories: Coverage, Physical Assets, Water Production, Company Staff and Environment.

For each of the indicators, the following references are to be established: category, information or name, unit of measurement and definition, as shown in the following example:

No Type Sub-type Data Unit Definition
5 Coverage Water Coverage Population served via household drinking water connection Inhabitants Number of residents with access to network drinking water via a household connection, at the end of the period
6 Coverage Water Coverage Duration of supply Hours/day Weighted average of service hours on the basis of continuous and discontinuous service connections (e.g., 2 24-hour connections and 8 18-hour connections = 21 hours)

Among the indicators defined by the regulator, some of the most important are those associated with network coverage, metering coverage, water losses, drinking water quality and wastewater treatment level.

Panama

The National Public Utilities Authority (ASEP), Panama’s regulator, has the power to establish norms of efficiency, quality and other aspects of service provision that providers must comply with. Accordingly, the regulator has defined service quality goals establishing optimum quality levels for drinking water and sanitary sewerage service providers within the systems they operate in.

The service quality goals set forth by ASEP correspond to the following aspects: drinking water quality, network water pressure, continuity of supply, wastewater treatment, wastewater quality, sanitary sewerage overflows and response to queries and customers. For this purpose, the regulator sets forth seven (7) general indicators for the aqueduct service, five (5) for the sewerage service, three (3) for customer service and four (4) for measuring individual goals of each provider in relation to other aspects.

For each indicator, the regulator details elements such as: goal to be reached, measuring system, information delivery period, assessment period and compensation for non-compliance.

Zambia

In line with its mandate to inform the public on water supply and sanitation issues, the Zambian regulator NWASCO publishes an annual sector report on the performance and status of the sector.

This sector report also highlights the performance of providers against set sector benchmarks derived from the Minimum Service Levels guidelines.

Benchmarking induces competition among commercial units by motivating a them to improve their own previous performance and to outperform others. Eight benchmarks have been set for major indicators, as follows.

Performance Indicators and Benchmarks
Indicator Benchmark
1. Water supply and sanitation coverage 80%
2. Unaccounted for water(UfW) 25%
3. Metering ratio 100%
4. Hours of supply 18
5. Water quality 98%
6. Staff per 1,000 connections 8
7. Collection efficiency 85%
8. Cost coverage by collections 100%

Australia

In Australia, the Essential Services Commission (ESC), which is the multisector regulator in Victoria state, has adopted the following service quality indicators.

SERVICE QUALITY INDICATORS
Domestic customers with instalment plans (100 costumers) Average customer interruption frequency (interruptions per customer) (number per customer)
Non-domestic customers with instalment plans (100 customers) Planned water supply customer interruptions frequency in peak hours (interruptions per customer)
Domestic restrictions for non-payment of bills (100 customers) Average duration of planned interruptions (minutes)
Non-domestic restrictions for non-payment of bills (100 customers) Average duration of unplanned interruptions (minutes)
Restrictions restored within three days (per cent, domestic only) Average customer minutes off supply (minutes)
Restrictions over 14 days (per cent, domestic only) Bursts and leaks (per 100 km of water mains)
Domestic legal actions (per 100 customers) Average response times to bursts and leaks – priority one
Non-domestic legal actions (per 100 customers) Average response times to bursts and leaks – priority two
Average debt level – restrictions (€) Average time to rectify bursts and leaks – priority one (min.)
Average debt level – legal action (€) Average time to rectify bursts and leaks – priority two (minutes)
Hardship grants and applications (per cent) Planned customer interruptions not restored within 5 hours (per cent)
Average value of hardship grants (€) Unplanned customer interruptions not restored within 5 hours (per cent)
Customer Responsiveness and Service Water losses
Average time taken to connect to an operator (seconds) Wastewater service
Calls answered within 30 seconds (per cent) Sewer blockages (per 100 km of sewer main)
Complaints received by water businesses (per cent) Customers experiencing a single sewer blockage
Water quality complaints (per cent) Sewer spills from reticulation and branch sewers (per 100 km)
Information statements processed within five days (per cent) Containment of sewer spills within 5 hours (per cent)

Internal capacities needed and the role of partners

As much as some of these norms and standards could be universally applied, tailoring them to specific contexts or shaping new ones will require internal regulatory capacities, ranging from technical water engineering skills and financial capacity for monetization of these measures, to customer relations abilities.

Whereas to a certain extent some of them could be supported by related ministries and service operators, much required capacity building and multi-stakeholder consultation around applicable standards could be supported by development partners and consumer associations.

Regulators’ staff must also be trained on basic service quality performance standards, and how to apply them in their own context.