November-December 2007

Reforming and Rebuilding

Successes and failures of municipal water efficiency initiatives in South Africa contain valuable lessons for North American water purveyors.

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By Sarah Wolfe

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Overall, the municipality increased its revenue to over 1.5 million rand (approximately $235,000 Canadian at 2006 rates). The extra income addresses the unaccounted-for water rates (i.e., leakage), the retrofit program, and other, somewhat misguided, infrastructure expansions. Van der Linde (2004) estimated that while Hermanus’s water supply issues were not completely resolved, the WDM program had delayed additional supply expansion by approximately seven years.

Other benefits of the campaign included improved access to water and supply assurance, job creation and skill training through the Working for Water program that eventually employed 120 low-income residents (Author unknown 1997), children’s environmental education, growth of community awareness, and attitudinal changes related to water issues (van der Linde 2004). The GHWCC also illustrated that, with a commitment to communication between the municipality and the consumer, regular feedback on water choices would promote conservation and higher levels of cooperation.

Critics and Problems
The Greater Hermanus Water Conservation Campaign is not without its critics. Residential support for the campaign, determined initially to be 97%, with 2% undecided, decreased as the water regulations were strictly enforced (McQueen and Pieters 1998). This decrease became particularly evident after a series of “wet’’ years altered the public’s perception of water scarcity and the need for such comprehensive water conservation efforts. In some cases, municipal councilors were in the “hot seat,” as the issues related to water conservation were politicized during a local election. The council’s later decisions, which undermined the GHWCC, were harshly, and publicly, criticized by the minister of water affairs (Editorial 2000).

Within the management structure itself, there were ongoing tensions between the treasury and the engineering departments as they struggled to find a compromise between allocating additional revenues to a central fund and allocating them to sustain water conservation efforts. This tension eventually coalesced as a contributing factor to the project’s end: The treasury made a unilateral decision to spend the funds accumulated by the WDM project. The funds had been earmarked for the ongoing communication campaign, to improve the infrastructure within the informal settlements and to continue the Working for Water employment program.

However, the decision was made to extend a water pipeline to Vermont, a very wealthy, and white, Hermanus neighborhood. Unsurprisingly, this decision did little to endear the WDM campaign or its well-recognized local practitioner and champion to the community. It also seriously undermined the campaign’s perceived intentions and legitimacy.

The treasury’s decision reinforced the more serious criticism that the GHWCC actually exacerbated the socioeconomic gaps between low-income residents (some of whom had difficulty paying the charges above the free block and had leaky or insecure connections) and visiting holidaymakers or the more financially secure local people. People in some of the low-income households also felt that the low block tariffs for minimal use were still too expensive and that the charges themselves ran counter to their basic rights to water under the new South African water law.

Finally, the challenges of managing an extensive and multifaceted campaign were substantial because the human resources weren’t available. The GHWCC was, according to van der Linde, just a “two-man team” for its duration. As of 2004, after the loss of the communication element, the conservation campaign, significantly less comprehensive than the original strategy, was being solely championed and managed by van der Linde while the Hermanus town council and the DWAF no longer provided support. Next Page >

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watergrrll

August 6th, 2008 8:33 PM PT

You should publish more stories about water resource management around the world.

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