Water&Sanitation Africa November/December 2021

Page 13

WISA • CHAIR’S COMMENT

SANITATION IS A SOCIAL ISSUE, NOT A TECHNICAL ONE South Africa already has numerous new, promising sanitation technologies at its disposal. But the level of acceptance and adoption is low. By Dan Naidoo, chairman, WISA

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s opposed to water – which is in a pipe, delivered and accepted – sanitation options are seldom immediately received with a positive response. Unfortunately, the flushing toilet is considered the gold standard for sanitation. There is a perception that all other sanitation technologies are inferior. Sanitation needs coordinated and facilitated discussions with the community before any technology is even trialled, let alone adopted. It requires a type of social trust (which is sadly lacking in many communities and municipalities). With sanitation, technical people need to consider social behaviour, customs, community norms, as well as local risks – and the appropriate technology needs to be strongly motivated. Engaging with communities, stakeholders and municipalities is crucial to success. Dialogues need to happen; communities need to be consulted on the associated stressors on water resources and systems. Nonsewered sanitation is a viable and sustainable option, and all issues need to be discussed in an open and transparent manner. The design and implementation of any of these technologies/systems must evolve via social interaction, dialogue

and consultation. Sanitation requires a softer approach, it’s a personal understanding that a new technology is a safe and dignified option. Whenever there is a change in leadership, people may be more open to new ideas, options and technologies. With the election of new municipal leadership and councillors, this may hopefully be a great opportunity – through an appreciation of new ideas, driven by renewed energy – to provide dignified sanitation solutions.

Off-grid sanitation

As a water-scarce country, we simply cannot afford to keep flushing large amounts of water down the drain. The areas that desperately need sanitation typically have no access to water, so non-sewered sanitation is a reality. But the key to this is getting buy-in and an understanding of how these technologies work – and for people to know that these technologies are as good (if not better) than flushing toilets. The Water Research Commission has done excellent work in facilitating international research and localising it with the South African Sanitation Technology Enterprise Programme (SASTEP) via piloted projects at different locations.

Dan Naidoo, chairman, WISA

How do we implement this technology? How do we sustain it? And how do we get it to be embraced by communities? While we have largely been focusing specifically on water over many years, sludge handling and management has become a huge issue and risk to our communities and the environment. If these technologies are deployed into areas that are difficult to access, one needs to consider how the solids are to be managed. Waste needs to be dealt with in a responsible way and a total solution implemented. We must be able to deliver various solutions for different areas and cultural practices. The technology is already available; it is by focusing on behaviour and acceptance that we can successfully deploy new sanitation technologies. N OV / D E C 2021

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Articles inside

Water training that generates a financial return

3min
page 40

From human waste to water

5min
pages 24-25

PIONEERING STANDARD TO END TOILET USE PARADIGM

7min
pages 21-23

Sedimentation as a water and wastewater treatment process

4min
pages 32-33

HDPE systems gaining traction in agricultural market

2min
pages 56-57

Optimising revenue from service charges

3min
pages 54-55

Leak detection in the Mother City

3min
pages 52-53

Unleash Nigeria’s water bounty with affordable sanitation

2min
page 51

One small sensor helps

2min
page 50

Water and life outweigh politics

4min
pages 48-49

Using good governance, stewardship to ensure water security

5min
pages 44-45

Stormwater management should be firmly on the urban agenda

6min
pages 42-43

Walking away on a high

5min
pages 38-39

The best of both worlds – low-/pour-flush toilets

7min
pages 26-29

From appalling to appealing – wastewater sludge beneficiation

5min
pages 30-31

From human waste to water

5min
pages 24-25

Sedimentation part of a water and wastewater treatment process

4min
pages 32-33

100 Mℓ of water from Ndlambe desal plant

1min
page 37

Successful rehabilitation of Setumo Dam

2min
page 36

Pioneering standard to end toilet use paradigm

7min
pages 21-23

Waterless sanitation – when will it take on?

5min
pages 18-20

It was said in WASA

5min
pages 6-7

CEO’s comment

2min
pages 11-12

Mark Bannister’s story

5min
pages 14-15

Chair’s comment

2min
page 13

Fast-tracking adoption of water-efficient toilets

8min
pages 8-10

Editor’s comment

4min
page 5

Green innovation in practice

1min
page 17

IWS

2min
page 16
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