Water, Sewage & Effluent July August 2018 | Page 3
Time for collaboration?
T
Kim Kemp | Editor | [email protected]
Water Sewage & Effluent July/August 2018
1
technology
Helgard Muller nodded his head. That
this is exactly what the problem is, namely
no cooperation; no sitting around a table
populated by representatives from each
interested party (and believe me, we are
all very interested, as a country generally),
trying to find areas of commonality and
synchronicity.
So, it was with utter glee that during
the Wednesday plenary, I heard someone
from the Health Department ask this exact
question of the two speakers, Dhesigen
Naidoo from the WRC and Sunita Narain,
from India, a published authority on Indian
water issues. I could have hugged him
(the guy from the Health Department, not
Naidoo). In fact, the WRC’s CEO was so
enthralled as to the young man’s nerve,
that he called him up to join him on the
platform and then flamboyantly took off
his “branded WRC jacket” and gave it to
the young man, calling him “courageous”
and vowing that this would be his pledge
thereafter.
I left feeling somewhat relieved that this
had been addressed — and a part of me
wondered if the jacket would have fitted me
as well as it did the young man? u
Dhesigen Naidoo talking at WISA, while still in
possession of his “branded WRC jacket”.
he biennial WISA 2018 Conference was
held in Cape Town from 24 to 28 June.
With no less than 11 sessions running
in parallel each of the full days, the subject
matter was vast, covering everything from
the impact of acid mine drainage to the
Fourth Industrial Revolution.
And therein lays the challenge.
While I commend the work that went
into organising the conference, as an
individual, there was no time or capacity
to follow any of the themed subject matters
in any depth, as well as network, interview,
gain an overall understanding as to the
status of the water sector, and view the
exhibitions.
This smorgasbord of offerings played on
my mind and while sitting with Helgard
Muller and having a cuppa before the first
plenary on the Wednesday morning, a
thought occurred to me, which I voiced to
him: How is it that South Africa appears to
be lagging in the water sector, specifically
in finding solutions? Could it be that we are
fractured in our approach?
My reasoning went something like this: If
one had a chance to view the programme,
going by the list of speakers and delegates,
there is no lack of expertise, both public
and private; no shortage of innovation and
technological savvy; and a vast pool of well-
equipped individuals and companies who
feel passionate about the state of our water
sector. Yet we are floundering.
Granted, this is thanks largely to an
ineffectual, inept Department of Water and
Sanitation (DWS), which has just sloughed
off an utter incompetent in the form of
Nomvula Mokonyane and now, filled her
vacated position with a minister who comes
without any knowledge of the water sector,
National Minister of Water and Sanitation,
Gugile Nkwinti. After holding the position
for 100 days, by his own admission, at
WISA, Nkwinti confessed that he “has a lot
to learn”. Basically, he’s a place holder for
the department until the 2019 elections,
but that’s another story.
Why, I (rhetorically) asked my coffee
companion, is it that, with so many
departments, bodies, authorities,
initiatives, individuals, companies (and
possible funding), there is no collaboration
among the parties? Why are there so many
silos of knowledge that not only soak up
any funding that may come their individual
way, but ideas/initiatives/projects appear
to be occurring in parallel? We already
know that the water sector is politically
driven, but could it also be ego driven?