ARTÍCULO
The vital minimum amount of drinking water required in Ecuador
Date
2018Registration in:
2079-9276
10.3390/resources7010015
Author
Martinez Moscoso, Fernando Andres
Aguilar Feijo, Victor Gerardo
Verdugo Silva, Julio Teodoro
Institutions
Abstract
In 2017, the government of Ecuador established the minimum quantity of water required
to be provided for free by drinking water utilities. Ecuador recognized the access to water as
a fundamental human right because it guarantees the good living, known as “Sumak kawsay”,
an indigenous Andean concept, in the Ecuadorian Constitution. This represents a novel approach to
water rights in the world, as it is the first attempt to establish a minimum quantity of water under a
constitutional guarantee by legislation, rather than regulation or judicial decision. However, this novel
legislative approach raises the question of how this minimum amount of free water will impact the
most vulnerable members of the Ecuadorian community. This paper provides the results of the first
comprehensive research of the minimum required water provision in Ecuador. In order to measure
the impact on the income of households, we built a methodology integrating: doctrinaire analyses,
normative studies, and economic analyses. According to the Ecuadorian legislation, over-consumption
of raw water generates additional costs that must be paid by water companies to the central
government. In that regard, there is an inevitable relationship between the efficiency of the service and
those additional costs. Efficiency, on this case, is the capacity of water companies (public or private) to
provide water services at an adequate price, observing the following parameters: quantity, quality and
sufficiency. Our research found that with this legislation in three Ecuadorian local governments
(Cuenca, Gualaceo and Suscal), the most vulnerable households (i.e., low-income and/or indigenous
households) will be affected the most. This means that and those families will spend the most part of
their income on water services otherwise they would have to reduce their water consumption.