Water&Sanitation Africa November/December 2023

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WISA • WISA K WAZULU-NATAL BRANCH

BRIDGING THE ACADEMIA-INDUSTRY GAP IN THE WASH SECTOR

T

By Mbali Sibiya, chair, WISA KZN Branch

he WISA KwaZulu-Natal Branch – in partnership with Durban University of Technology, Ewseta, uMngeni-uThukela Water, Universal Water Solutions, Borda SA, and the Dr Nomcebo Mthombeni, acting deputy dean, Durban University of Technology

Collaboration, innovation, and education are the keys to a sustainable future in the water and sanitation sector.” Nontando Rambau (left), associate, Talbot, and Vikesh Daya, MD, Universal Water Solutions

Department of Water and Sanitation – recently held a symposium that brought together water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) sector stakeholders and academia. Here are some of the highlights: Mluleki Mnguni, WISA 2024 Conference Chair

Mluleki Mnguni, WISA 2024 Conference Chair, highlighted the challenges that have plagued the WASH sector lately, with par ticular reference to cholera cases. “We should not be having repor ts of cholera outbreaks in South Africa in 2024 – this is evidence of governance issues in the WASH sector.”

Rambau shared her personal experiences as a practitioner who started working in the private sector after graduation. “The private sector requires professionals with skills and does not make it a habit to recruit graduates who do not possess those specific skills. Graduates are not exposed to technological advancement and therefore lack this skill; they need to align with the Fourth Industrial Revolution. Communication, project management, financial, and leadership skills should be honed at

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NOV E MB E R /DEC EM BER 2023

Nthabiseng Fundakubi, deputy director general, Department of Water and Sanitation

Nthabiseng Fundakubi, deputy director general of the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS), stressed the importance of water sector collaborations from grassroots. She believes that it is essential to include children from primary school level on water awareness campaigns and advocacy. “Curricula at higher institutions must be fit for purpose so that graduates can easily fit into the workplace. Industry practitioners should not shy away from mentoring and supervising academic students from primary school level. They can also provide real-time WASH projects for lecturers and students to get better industry exposure.” the academic level, particularly with postgraduates.” Daya spoke about the need for the private sector to provide more opportunities for graduates without and experience or skills. He highlighted that this can only be done if the private and public sectors, as well as academia work together – and are intentional about developing a specific workforce for the sector. “Academia must develop soft skills at academic institutional level, so that graduates will manage with integrating into the private sector.”


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Articles inside

AA+ RATING FOR RAND WATER

0
pages 50-51

THE EVOLUTION OF MAGALIES WATER

3min
pages 48-49

WE PROVIDE GIW ® SLURRY PUMP SOLUTIONS

3min
pages 46-48

MINE WATER MANAGEMENT: A REGULATORY OVERVIEW

1min
page 45

Loadsheddingresilient water and sanitation operations

1min
page 44

BACK TO BASICS WITH WATER QUALITY MONITORING

3min
pages 42-43

CONFRONTING THE PIT LATRINE CRISIS

4min
pages 40-41

WILL RESIDENTS IN INFORMAL SETTLEMENTS PAY FOR SANITATION SERVICES?

5min
pages 37-39

ROCLA’S SANITATION SUCCESS

1min
pages 35-36

COLLABORATIVE WATER MANAGEMENT: A PATH TO ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN PEACE

4min
pages 32-34

NEVER WASTE A GOOD DISASTER

7min
pages 28-32

AFRICAN EXAMPLES OF EFFICIENT WATER USE

2min
page 27

WATER STORAGE: FROM 5 000 TO 4.5 MILLION LITRES

2min
pages 25-27

PRECAST CONCRETE TECHNOLOGY TO FAST-TRACK WATER SERVICE DELIVERY

6min
pages 22-24

Water storage for rural communities

2min
page 21

DECENTRALISED SOLUTIONS: THE ANSWER TO SOUTH AFRICA’S WATER CRISIS

5min
pages 18-20

SOLVING THE SEWAGE DILEMMA: a closer look at on-site treatment

4min
pages 16-17

BRIDGING THE ACADEMIA-INDUSTRY GAP IN THE WASH SECTOR

2min
pages 14-15

WE NEED

2min
pages 12-13

Let’s talk about WSAs and WSPs

1min
page 11

A DECADE’S OF ADVOCATING FOR WATER REUSE

2min
pages 10-11

OUTSTANDING BLUE DROP RESULTS

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page 9

PROUDLY SOUTH AFRICAN WITH AN INTERNATIONAL FLAIR

3min
pages 8-9

You said it in WASA

4min
pages 6-8

Water & Sanitation Africa

2min
page 5

EFFICIENT AND CLEAN SOLUTIONS FOR THE COMPLETE WATER CYCLE.

0
pages 2-4
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