Africa Asia Middle East عربي Français PlusNews Film & TV Photo Radio free subscription Mobile RSS find IRIN on facebook follow IRIN on twitter



humanitarian news and analysis
a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Advanced search
 Saturday 21 November 2009 Latest reports:
 
Home 
Africa 
Asia 
Middle East 
Weekly reports 
Global Issues 
In-Depth reports 
Maps 
Most popular 
 
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
SOUTH AFRICA: Clock ticks towards water scarcity


Photo: Keith Marais/IRIN
South Africa's water system needs better nanagement
JOHANNESBURG, 22 May 2009 (IRIN) - The clock is ticking for South Africa's stretched water supply, and in another five years demand will have caught up with supply, according to a top official.

Jones Mnisi, acting chief operating officer at Johannesburg Water, the public utility overseeing supply in the country's economic hub, told a recent conference on water security that the tipping point where demand outstripped supply may not be far away.

South Africa is chronically water-stressed. Although growth has slowed, an expanding economy, a growing population, and increased evaporation caused by climate change are conspiring to put additional pressures on water resources.

Yet leading experts at the conference said the situation could be addressed if the country curbed demand and improved water quality to facilitate reuse.

A paper by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) said South Africa's water surplus had been dangerously low since at least 2000 – four years after the country began buying bulk water from the multi-dam Lesotho Highlands Water Project, built on the Senqunyane River in neighbouring Lesotho.

Although the next phase of the project, expected to be in place in 2019, could relieve some of the pressure on South Africa's water supply, it was likely to be too late, said Chris Herold, chairman of the water division of the South African Institute of Civil Engineering (SAICE).

Quantity and quality

Experts said the quality and quantity of the water supply should be better managed, and called for more investment in infrastructure. "The national water resource strategy has assumed that water demand management will happen," said Herold, "On the implementation side, some of the local authorities have not come to the party."

''South Africa's water surplus had been dangerously low since at least 2000''
Anthony Turton, a former researcher at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, who now works as a water management consultant, predicted that South Africa would soon have to start reusing effluent, which would entail revamping infrastructure, with waste treatment plants a priority.

Water treatment plants would have to produce effluent clean enough for reuse in the industrial sector, for example switching to buying cheaper, recycled water for cooling plants, he said.

This may be harder than it sounds. Turton pointed out that 12 waste-water treatment plants, none of which function properly, were dumping effluent into the Hartbeespoort Dam on the Crocodile River, 20km southwest of Johannesburg.

He and others have also begun to conclude that if water could be stored in underground man-made aquifers, he said, it could save a vast quantity of water from evaporation annually.

When the democratic government came to power in 1994, an estimated 14 million people lacked access to a formal water supply, and about half the population had no formal sanitation, according to the Department of Water and Environment.

Water and sanitation remain contentious issues, and government has assured South Africans that it will commit more funds to improve water infrastructure, deploy personnel to local government to oversee operations, build capacity, and ensure proper financial management.

A recent progress report card on the UN Millennium Development Goals said the country was on track for achieving access to safe drinking water and sanitation by 2015.

"Water service provision is critical, and it is a sensitive issue," Turton said. "We have to give people everything that the struggle was about, like dignity. If we don't, we're going to have a lot of angry people."

SAICE's Herold said government should crack down on hundreds of farmers who used water illegally from the Vaal River, 100km south of Johannesburg, which supplies the city. The department of water affairs has established a unit, known as the "Blue Scorpions", to police illegal bulk water use.

llg/jk/he


Theme(s): (IRIN) Water & Sanitation

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
Countries
FREE Subscriptions
Your e-mail address:


Submit your request
 More reports
  • 21/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA: Life expectancy drops
  • 19/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA: World Cup to help create HIV awareness
  • 18/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA: Funds needed for displaced Zimbabweans
  • 17/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA-ZIMBABWE: More than 2,000 Zimbabweans flee, fearing attacks
  • 13/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: Global Fund approves $2.4 billion in new grants
     More on Water & Sanitation
  • 19/Nov/2009
    LIBERIA: Disease rife as more people squeeze into fewer toilets
  • 12/Nov/2009
    GUINEA: Humanitarian update
  • 09/Nov/2009
    SOMALIA: Life getting harder for Mogadishu displaced
  • 05/Nov/2009
    In Brief: Nine million Afghans living on less than a dollar a day - survey
  • 05/Nov/2009
    KENYA: Replacing the bucket latrine
     Most Read
    GUINEA: Timeline since independence
    GLOBAL: Children’s rights not yet a reality
    UGANDA: HIV-positive women need family planning services, study shows
    BANGLADESH: Two years after Cyclone Sidr, survivors still seeking shelter
    DRC-CONGO: New wave of refugees flees fresh fighting

    Services:  Africa | Asia | Middle East | PlusNews | Film & TV | Photo | Radio | Weekly | Live news map | Interviews | E-mail subscription
    Feedback | E-mail Webmaster | Terms & Conditions | Really Simple Syndication News Feeds | About IRIN | Jobs | Bookmark IRINnews | Donors

    Copyright © IRIN 2009. All rights reserved.
    This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. The boundaries, names and designations used on maps on this site do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the UN. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.