Water, Sewage & Effluent March-April 2018 | Page 18

Building resilient cities Cities cannot be resilient without integrating healthy wetlands in infrastructure asset management, and planning. By Bonani Madikizela A all authorities, regardless of the legal mandate, such as the collaboration among line departments; the Department of Environmental Affairs (DEA) (the international focal point); the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS); the Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries; City of Tshwane; South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI); and communities. The change brought about by the awareness creation is slowly becoming visible. This is illustrated by the declining rate of wetlands destruction, as some investment in wetlands restoration across the country increases. Hundreds of ‘green’ jobs in various villages have been created and improved the livelihoods in many homesteads. Indeed, more resources are still required in South Africa owing to massive wetland degradation (estimated beyond 60% of mapped wetlands so far) that both the country and world have witnessed. Urban wetlands are essential and contribute to making cities liveable. In South Africa, we have witnessed the dramatic flood disasters in Johannesburg and Durban, almost annually over the past few rainy seasons. While wetlands and river riparian vegetation alone nnually, on the second of February, the world over remembers the establishment of the Ramsar Convention that happened in 1971 (the same year that the Water Research Commission, or WRC, was established), making it one of the old organisations that concerns itself with the well-being of wetlands, society, and economy. Ramsar’s definition of wetlands includes all water resources from mountain seeps through estuaries, up to six metres into the oceans. This definition allows for the integration of Overcrowding and improper infrastructure contribute to issues of sanitation, pollution, and the destruction of wetlands. 16 Water Sewage & Effluent March/April 2018