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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The South African water supply and sanitation sector was crumbling during the late ’80s and early ’90s. Political corruption, international sanctions, and low gold prices meant a general diversion of funds away from central services like basic water. A history of misguided management decisions based on apartheid’s tenets had wreaked havoc with the natural landscape and water allocations. But as the apartheid state lurched toward its end, the democratic transition wasn’t smooth in the water sector.

Simon Forster, longtime government employee turned consultant, recalls the situation in the rural townships: “It looked very much like [a physical] drought. People were going along to puddles in the ground and entire villages were living off them, but [the real cause] was [that] the elaborate water systems were systematically collapsing, failing to supply, failing to collect revenues.”

It didn’t have to be that way. Forster observes that South Africa was known to have “had some of the best water engineers in the world. We were the envy of the world ... the South African water industry was driven by some very intelligent, very farsighted gentlemen.” However, the Department of Water Affairs and Forestry (DWAF) was at the bottom of the political “pecking order” because of its non-Afrikaner leadership and its practice of using catchments as water management units, rather than the political and racially defined homeland system.

But while the DWAF’s power was officially constrained, some farsighted water professionals began planning for the future. They recognized that the country would need massive capital investments to extend the supply infrastructure to the distant former townships. To help offset those costs, the sector would have to improve its water efficiency strategies, and by 1989 two water efficiency documents were being quietly developed. The political reality necessitated caution, however.

Forster laughs as he recalls that water sector plans had been written for post-apartheid South Africa: “[But] we didn’t say that in the preamble; we’d have got shot for that. But instead we had a quality document out for water supply and sanitation to developing communities. It was a euphemism.”

And so the South African water professionals waited for the political guard to change.

In 1994, South Africa did not collapse into rioting and retribution, as some had predicted. Instead, long queues snaked out from the country’s polling stations as millions of citizens voted for South Africa’s first democratically elected government. The new African National Congress (ANC) government was to lead a “country of two worlds”—a highly developed, affluent world populated mainly by its white citizens and a less developed world of informal urban settlements and rural townships created under the apartheid regime and populated primarily by black citizens. These worlds combined to make a country inundated by urgent problems: a flagging economy based on a defunct social system, a population with high expectations and eager for immediate change, an out-migration of the professional corps because of perceived security problems and economic uncertainty, and a set of environmental conditions that limited the development potential and undermined the majority’s quality of life.

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Two situations catalyzed the ANC government’s efforts to give greater attention to water management. First, a series of droughts in the early ’90s reinforced the need for immediate action and better, more long-term decision-making. Second, the ANC was publicly committed to meeting its citizens’ basic needs. In addition to education, employment, housing, and health care, these basic needs included the provision of services to the 14 million people without access to safe drinking water and the 21 million that lacked reliable sanitation in the rural and informal settlements. South Africa’s water realities—heavy water use by the agriculture and the mining industries and rapidly escalating requirements because of population increases and urbanization—meant that decision-makers had to think about water management in new ways.

Water Legislation
South Africa’s water legislation, originally derived from the Dutch legal model, has undergone massive changes since 1994. The 1956 Water Act, which placed the priority on supply development and riparian rights, was unable to address the social, political, and environmental issues of post-apartheid South Africa. It was replaced with the new National Water Act in 1998. 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.

watergrrll

August 6th, 2008 8:33 PM PT

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

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