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TitleAugering : technical training handbook on affordable manual well drilling
Publication TypeMiscellaneous
Year of Publication2010
AuthorsLabas, J, Vuik, R, van der Wal, A
Secondary TitleManual drilling series
Volume3
Pagination57 p.; tab.; fig.; with technical drawings
Date Published2010-06-01
Keywordsaccess to water, groundwater, manual drilling, technical development, well drilling
Abstract

The high cost of developing potable water sources prevents many rural people from gaining access to clean, safe water supplies. Increasing access to improved water supply for under-served people and communities while keeping up with growing populations will require serious consideration of lower cost alternatives to the existing expensive water supply options. The manual drilling sector has proven itself as a successful, lower-cost approach with great potential under suitable conditions. In numerous countries manual drilling techniques are used as an alternative or to complement machine drilling. Drilling ‘shallow’ water wells by hand using local enterprises, can reduce the cost of a well by a factor 4 - 10 compared to a machine-drilled borehole. This cost reduction not only enables NGOs and Governments to construct more water points, but also ‘opens the door’ to villagers, farmers, schools and small communities to finance well construction independently through the private sector. Strategies and programs should be adopted to professionalize the manual drilling sector in order to scale- up rural water supply for drinking and irrigation purposes.This handbook describes the hand auger technique. This cheap and effective technique is very suitable for sinking shallow wells in soft soils and is excellent for soil surveys. Many drilling teams have this technique in their toolkit to complement other drilling techniques. [authors abstract]

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