Project

Wastewater Surveillance Planning

Planning a laboratory network for infectious disease surveillance in Africa

Wastewater-based epidemiological surveillance has emerged as a powerful early warning tool for infectious disease outbreaks, enabling the detection of pathogens circulating in a population before clinical cases are reported. Yet significant disparities persist between high-income and low-income countries in their capacity to implement, sustain, and act on this type of surveillance. Across Africa, fragmented infrastructure, limited technical expertise, insufficient long-term funding, and the absence of coordinated frameworks continue to constrain the development of functional and integrated WBE systems. At the same time, the continent bears a disproportionate burden of epidemic-prone diseases, underscoring the urgent need for anticipatory, equity-oriented surveillance solutions aligned with One Health principles.

Objectives

  • Map existing capacities and needs across African countries through a dedicated Pan-African survey on wastewater and environmental surveillance infrastructure
  • Design a coordinated laboratory network for routine and outbreak-response wastewater surveillance, adapted to the diversity of regional and national contexts
  • Strengthen local technical capacities through training, methods-sharing, and the pooling of resources among network members
  • Develop intersectoral and international collaborations that integrate wastewater surveillance into broader public health and environmental monitoring systems
  • Identify sustainable financing pathways to support long-term implementation, from both donor institutions and national public health authorities
  • Expand surveillance to a broader range of targets, including bacteria, parasites, and antimicrobial resistance (AMR) markers, in line with an integrated environmental health approach

The Pasteur Network serves as a central convener and technical catalyst for this initiative, bringing together its members and external partners to design a coordinated and equitable wastewater surveillance architecture across Africa.

Building on the momentum of the June 2025 meeting at Institut Pasteur de Lille — which gathered more than 50 experts from five continents — the Pasteur Network is driving several key workstreams:

  • Pan-African Survey: Leading an unprecedented continent-wide assessment of existing wastewater and environmental surveillance capacities, gaps, and funding landscapes, to inform the design of a contextually relevant network
  • Regional Workshops: Facilitating structured dialogues to identify country- and region-specific needs, available resources, and priority pathogens for surveillance
  • Capacity Strengthening: Supporting skills transfer and training across member institutions, with a particular focus on technical harmonization and methodological standards
  • Policy and Financing Advocacy: Engaging national authorities and international donors to build the case for sustained, long-term investment in wastewater surveillance as a public health priority
  • Knowledge Sharing: Enabling the exchange of best practices, tools, and data between network members to ensure that innovations developed in one context can be adapted and replicated across the continent

  • Gates Foundation
  • Wellcome Connecting Science
  • EU HERA (Health Emergency Preparedness and Response Authority)
  • AFD (Agence Française de Développement)
  • Fondation Mérieux

Kathleen Victoir
Senior Scientific Officer
kathleen.victoir@pasteur.fr