Water&Sanitation Africa January/February 2022

Page 7

WISA • CHAIR'S COMMENT

– can we do more with less?

If there is one new year’s resolution that every government body, business and South African needs to make, it’s to use water efficiently. By Dan Naidoo, chairman, WISA

T

he 2018 National Water and Sanitation Master Plan identified a water supply deficit of 17% by 2030. Despite this, South Africans use more water than the global average – 234 litres per person daily – which means the country’s per capita water consumption is higher than the global average of 173 litres. With a lack of funding to boost supply, minimal to zero water tariff increases and a growing need for water subsidies for the indigent, the efficient use of water must be a priority. It is nonsensical to invest in increasing water supply when we are not using water efficiently. We need to make the average South African understand that we cannot provide more water without everyone using water they already have access to sparingly. Managing demand, reducing water losses and decreasing non-revenue water is a mantra that water professionals have been singing to politicians for many years. Due to the inefficient use of water, South Africa has to constantly direct funds (that we don’t have) to the upgrading of pipelines, water and wastewater plants, and dams.

Demand

Based on rising populations, economic growth projections and current efficiency levels, demand for water in South Africa is expected to rise by 17.7 billion m³ in 2030, while water supply is projected to amount to 15 billion m³. The word ‘demand’ needs to be unpacked. Is that demand realistic? Should we be chasing that demand as a target? Or should we be debating it? Can we do more with less? We need to consider water’s circular economy and its entire value chain. We need to look around wastewater as a resource; we need to go back to the basics.

A circular economy offers an opportunity to recognise and capture the full value of water – as a service, an input to processes, a source of energy, and a carrier of nutrients and other materials.

Collaboration is needed

There must be a joint effort in managing water losses and fixing infrastructure. What quick gains can we achieve when focusing on the efficient use of water? Agriculture uses more than 60% of our water resources. Looking at places like Australia and much of the US, the agricultural use of water is extremely efficient, and there are many new technologies that help farmers to manage irrigation better. Are we assisting our farmers? Is the water industry having discussions and sharing knowledge with our farmers? Farmers played a pivotal role in saving Cape Town from ‘Day Zero’. Many institutes and organisations have launched and are running water efficiency programmes. Here is a non-exhaustive list: • The National Business Initiative has launched a water programme to address South Africa’s risk. • The UN has launched the CEO Water Mandate – an industry-driven initiative to reduce water stress. • AQUAffection has the #SurplusWater2025 programme to work towards achieving a water surplus. • The CSIR has created a Smart Water Use Division to provide knowledge, innovation, skills and services to improve water supply and demand management through effective water resource planning. • Rand Water’s Water Wise campaign is aimed at increasing awareness of the need to value water and to use it wisely. We need to take these messages and amplify them to the South African public. J A N /F E B 2022

5


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Precast toilets manufactured in rural areas

3min
page 39

Link between POWER and WATER security

3min
page 42

Xhora Off-channel Storage Dam assists with water security

6min
pages 48-49

Concerning chemicals detected in local dams

3min
page 43

Open channel flow measurement and monitoring

5min
pages 46-47

Duckbill-shaped spillway put to the test

2min
page 44

New message to the world of water management

3min
pages 40-41

Link between power and water security

2min
page 42

Refurbishment of Nalubaale Dam

3min
page 45

School sanitation needs more than rhetoric

7min
pages 36-38

How much is a wetland actually worth?

10min
pages 32-35

Pressure sensors key throughout the desalination process

2min
page 26

What could cause fouling of membranes?

2min
page 25

Building knowledge, delivering insight

8min
pages 18-20

Clean water for 500 000 Gauteng residents

2min
page 31

Wastewater sludge – a growing liability or existing resource?

8min
pages 21-24

Sanitation systems where the sewer does not go

11min
pages 27-30

Inspection services company enters water market

4min
pages 16-17

Sizabantu Piping Systems

5min
pages 10-11

YWP

5min
pages 8-9

Editor’s comment

4min
page 5

CEO’s comment

2min
page 6

Solutions for industrial water treatment

2min
page 14

Chair’s comment

2min
page 7

Tools to investigate reuse potential of industrial effluent

5min
pages 12-13

Sewage treatment at Botswana diamond mine

2min
page 15
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.