Abstract

The Department of Water Affairs (DWA) has embarked on a nationwide programme to develop water-reconciliation strategies for all towns across the country. Reconciliation strategies for the major metropolitan areas and systems (e.g. Johannesburg/Pretoria, East London, Cape Town and Durban) were developed next. The implementation of these strategies is monitored by strategy steering committees. The approach has now been extended to all other metropolitan areas as well as all towns and villages or clusters of villages. In order to prepare the actual strategies, regardless of the size of the town, thorough documentation, research and analysis of the available information was required, as well as evaluation of projected growth scenarios to assess water requirements over the next 25 years and identification of potential additional sources to meet this growing requirement. It has emerged that the poor operation and maintenance of water supply, treatment and reticulation infrastructure are resulting in significant losses, which, if corrected, can reverse the current water shortages being experienced. Similarly, the generally poor management of effluent remains a threat to surface water and groundwater quality downstream. It appears that many municipalities perceive groundwater as an unreliable resource; however, in general, the issue of staff and skills shortages to manage the resource effectively is the actual problem. This is an operational issue rather than a groundwater-resource-specific issue. This aspect requires special attention for existing groundwater schemes and proposed groundwater development. In most instances water conservation and water-demand management and the development of local surface and groundwater resources are the most feasible options to meet any current or projected future water-supply shortfalls. Any intervention must be combined with a skills-development programme at the operational level to ensure the sustainability of the proposed supply options. This paper is based on the experience gained in the development of reconciliation strategies for the towns and villages in the DWA Southern Planning Region (i.e. surface water drainage areas in the Eastern Cape and Western Cape Provinces), which was carried out by Umvoto Africa in association with engineering consulting practice Aurecon.

Highlights

  • All towns reconciliation strategies studyThe overall objective of the studies was to provide first-order water availability and water requirement reconciliation strategies for all towns and villages in South Africa (DWA, 2009b)

  • In 2008 the Department of Water Affairs (DWA) commenced with a nationwide programme to develop water reconciliation strategies for all towns, villages and clusters of villages across the country, following on the good progress with the reconciliation strategies for the metropolitan areas

  • The large numbers of rural villages that occur in the eastern regions of the Eastern Cape Province part of the study area were grouped as clusters to facilitate integrated water resource management rather than the development of a huge numbers of stand-alone schemes

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Summary

All towns reconciliation strategies study

The overall objective of the studies was to provide first-order water availability and water requirement reconciliation strategies for all towns and villages in South Africa (DWA, 2009b). Towns and clusters of villages were studied in order of priority in terms of their currently perceived water resource problems. ISSN 1816-7950 (On-line) = Water SA Vol 38 No 3 International Conference on Groundwater Special Edition 2012. It was not considered feasible or necessary to develop an individual reconciliation strategy for each individual town or settlement, but all towns and villages were addressed in the study. Villages and settlements were grouped together into logical clusters based on their current or proposed future shared water resources for which a single reconciliation strategy could be developed. Towns with a significant water-supply shortfall or data gaps beyond the scope of this study and/or requiring separate attention were ‘red-flagged’ for a detailed reconciliation study or further follow-up to improve the confidence in the information

Current situation of water supply at local municipal level
Water requirements
Water losses
Cacadu DM rural schemes
Water quality
West Coast
Proposed interventions
Water conservation and demand management
Refurbishment or upgrade of existing infrastructure
Groundwater development
Findings
Conclusions and recommendations
Full Text
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