Water, Sewage & Effluent January February 2019 | Page 41

About the author www.waterafrica.co.za An example of delayed investments in additional supply infrastructure could be seen in Hammanskraal, where water was dirty because the treatment works were hopelessly under capacity. Water Sewage & Effluent January/February 2019 41 innovations Despite spending R2.2-billion on a supply project for the 55 villages around Giyani in Limpopo, the villages are still without a reliable supply of water. newspapers, that infrastructure often does not work. The case of the 55 villages around Giyani in Limpopo is famous. Despite spending R2.2-billion on a supply project, the villages are still without a reliable supply of water. A year ago, DWS reported that, although 96% of South Africans had access to basic infrastructure, only 65% had access to reliable services. The Giyani case is attributed to corruption and the Special Investigation Unit is reported to be closing in on the culprits. But it would be wrong to assume that corruption is the main cause of supply interruptions. In Krugersdorp, a combination of power failures and pipe breakages led to days of dry taps. In Rustenburg, Rand Water reduced supplies because they were exceeding their allowed abstraction from the Vaal. Supplies to Matjhabeng Local Municipality, which includes large towns like Welkom and Virginia, were cut off for a few days because the municipality did not pay its bulk provider. When the municipality went to Mike Muller is a visiting adjunct professor at the Wits School of Governance. A former DG of Water Affairs and commissioner of the National Planning Commission, he now advises on water and development matters as a member of the Strategic Advisory Group of the UN’s Joint Monitoring Programme for the water supply and sanitation components of SDG6. how bad things are today. The DWS initiative to publish an annual Blue Drop report assessing the state of municipal water management would have provided the perfect instrument to monitor South Africa’s SDG performance. Unfortunately, former Minister Nomvula Mokonyane stopped publishing the report in 2014. Cynics noted that the two-year delay in publishing the final report was probably because of an 8% drop in drinking water quality between 2012 and 2014. These are not new problems. In 2014, Cabinet gave the DWS the target of providing a cohesive plan and a coherent approach to ensure 90% reliable water supply services by 2019. Since then, reliability has been steadily deteriorating. All this raises serious questions. Cape Town decided not to interrupt water supplies at night because of court to protest, they explained that they simply did not have the money to pay. Meanwhile Cape Town faced its ‘Day Zero’ of cuts because the supply system did not have enough capacity in the face of a severe drought. That was, in part, because they had delayed investments in additional supply infrastructure. Similarly, water in Hammanskraal was dirty because the treatment works were hopelessly under capacity. These stories add up to a very gloomy picture that is summarised by StatsSA, our official statistical agency. The 2017 Household Survey published by StatsSA last year showed that around 50% of households in Limpopo and Mpumalanga suffered serious interruptions. For the country as a whole, the figure was over 20%, and it has been getting worse. In addition, water quality has been declining. Unfortunately, we do not know