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New water resources strategy published amid new challenges

19th July 2013

By: Idéle Esterhuizen

  

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Water and Environmental Affairs Minister Edna Molewa has launched the final version of the Second National Water Resources Strategy (NWRS2), following Cabinet’s approval of the plan in early July.

The draft NWRS2 was published in the Government Gazette for public comment in September last year and extensive pub-lic consultations were held between the Depart- ment of Water Affairs (DWA) and stakeholders.

Since the first edition of the strategy was published in 2004, new challenges, including security of supply, environmental degradation, resource pollution and the inefficient use of water, had emerged, the Minister stated at a recent briefing. She added that various changes had occurred in the country’s water landscape, which called for a new approach.

Molewa said the main focus of the NWRS2 was equitable and sustainable access to and use of water by all South Africans.

“Equity and redistribution will be achieved through the authorisation process and other mechanisms and programmes, such as water allocation reform, financial support to emerg-ing farmers and support to urban and rural economic development initiatives,” she told members of the media at a briefing.

The NWRS2 was also geared towards three key objectives, namely to ensure that water supported development and the elimination of poverty and inequality; that it contributed to the economy and job creation; and that it is protected, used, developed, conserved, managed and controlled in a sustainable and equitable manner.

Eradicating Poverty

In this way, the strategy responded to South Africa’s vision for 2030, as set out in the National Development Plan, which discusses the national development goal of eradicating poverty and sharply reducing inequality by 2030.

“Water supply in our country has largely been tied to surface water and its development. Reconciliation strategies that have been developed by the DWA, which assess the water balance against future needs will inform our future resource planning, management and investment in all provinces,” Molewa said.

The NWRS2 emphasises that efforts must be intensified to reduce preventable water losses. Molewa referred to recent research published by the Water Research Commission (WRC), which indicated that water losses for urban supply systems were at 36.8% over the past six years, equal to 1.58-billion cubic metres a year or about R11-billion.

“This is naturally of great concern for a country such as ours that is water-stressed. It is encouraging to note that some municipalities and other water services authorities have begun to address the issue of water losses,” the Minister said.

Operating Rules

Included in the strategic action set out in the NWRS2 was that the DWA would prior-itise cooperating with municipalities, water boards and catchment management agencies to systematically develop and implement sound operating rules for all water supply systems in South Africa.

The DWA would also work with the Depart-ment of Environmental Affairs (DEA) to ensure that appropriate conditions were placed on mining licence holders to ensure that mines treated acid mine drainage (AMD) to a suitable standard. The DWA’s reconciliation strategies would also incorporate treated AMD as an additional recourse, where appropriate.

DWA acting director-general Trevor Balzer said the department was on track with its plans to tackle the AMD problem in the Witwatersrand gold basins, where decant had been stopped in the western basin in August last year. In the central basin, pumps were currently being installed and were expected to be operational before the environmental criti- cal level (ECL) was reached in two months’ time.

“We now have adequate funding for that programme and we are confident that we will not reach the ECL, given the work we are doing there,” Molewa added.

Further, the DWA, in partnership with relevant stakeholders would develop an invest-ment framework, which would incorporate the costs of the total sector value chain, infra-structure development and sustainable water management. Investment Frame An appropriate funding model in support of the institutional arrangement investment frame would also be developed.

“The funding shortage that we are high-lighting in our ten-year investment plan, which is located in this strategy, is quite insur-mountable and we believe that, by working with our partners in the private sector, we can [close] that gap,” Molewa assured.

Covering emerging policy issues, the NWRS2 states that, despite South Africa not having made a final decision on shale gas, the DWA would, in partnership with the WRC, the DEA and the Department of Mineral Resources, develop a regulatory framework that guided the conditions that would be imposed on hydraulic fracturing, which is associated with shale gas extraction, to protect the country’s groundwater resources.

“I am also confident that the entire water sector and, indeed, all other sectors will embrace this plan and walk this path with us in taking water resource management in our country to the next level,” the Minister enthused.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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