Water&Sanitation Africa November/December 2021

Page 40

TRAINING & DEVELOPMENT

Water training

that generates a

financial return Using water efficiently requires a cultural change in addition to technical solutions. Water education can help develop a water-saving culture – in businesses and communities. Gerrie Brink, managing director of AQUAffection and founder of the #SurplusWater2025 movement, speaks to WASA about the new training programme.

R

educing water waste starts with monitoring and training. We have created site-specific training programmes with site-specific employees, where they are taught how to monitor usage and identify leaks and inefficiencies in the system. The data used in training is from that site’s water meter and monitoring system. Monitoring will show the impact that education has on water consumption,” explains Brink. Skills development matrix As a bonus, this training can contribute towards a company’s BBBEE scorecard. “The BBBEE scorecard is a system made up by seven elements, each with certain weighting points. Skills development is a priority element and contributes 25 points towards the BBBEE scorecard,” says Brink. #SurplusWater2025 offers training that falls under Category E ‘Work Integrated Learning’ of the Skills Development

Gerrie Brink, managing director of AQUAffection and founder of the #SurplusWater2025 movement

38

NOV /DE C 2021

Expenditure matrix. This involves educational activities that integrate the academic learning of water with its practical application in the workplace. The training programmes qualify as Skills Development Expenditure because they are: • external training by an external company • structured, supervised, experiential learning in the workplace, which may include some institutional instruction. Companies are invoiced for training per site. A training register, certificate of attendance and credits are awarded to each person present at the training session. Reducing demand “There is little point in increasing water supply into an inefficient network. While there is a strong focus on water supply issues, there is very little done to address water demand. If we can reduce demand, we can reduce our supply deficit. Education is the very first step in decreasing water waste. Training will illustrate what can be done to save water and what should be prioritised. It helps a company understand its current water footprint,” states Brink. Brink has geared training towards fostering a passion, respect and understanding of water. “The aim of this training is action. This training provides people with the tools to address the water crisis from a demand perspective.” The training includes the following: • short history of water and where it comes from • why it is important to monitor and log water usage

• t he history and flow profile of the specific site or facility •h ow to interpret this data •h ow to apply the data to improve and simplify our daily tasks • i dentifying options to improve water efficiency and reduce waste •h ow actions and decisions contribute to #SurplusWater2025. Comprising 12 chapters with an intro video, a more comprehensive video, downloadable worksheets and questions at the end of every chapter, the training is interactive and takes about three hours to complete. It covers a wide variety of topics: from the history of water boards, through desalination to finding water leaks and efficiencies in toilet flushing mechanisms. Certain videos and documents can be white labelled. The training course called ‘Water Matters 101’ is available on the SurplusWater2025.com website. “This is likely the only training course where one can prove savings in water (and in money) via monitoring systems. It is set to align everyone in the company to use water efficiently. Efficiency means to effectively cut out waste, without compromising on convenience. Operating efficiently has a direct impact on profits by decreasing overheads and reducing the capital required to provide water backup systems,” states Brink.

®

www.aquaffection.com


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

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