Water, Sewage & Effluent November December 2018 | Page 3
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the entire water basin is essential, as urban
water resilience is not possible without
rural water resilience. In simple terms,
we must be more water-wise. With up to
4.3-billion people expected to live in cities
by 2050, this is something city leaders and
water managers need to be looking at now.
Whilst this is a challenge, it also provides
a significant opportunity to revolutionise
how urban water systems are designed and
retrofitted, and how they can deliver greater
benefits for all.”
In a more local context in our
Environment feature on page 26, Mike
Muller looks at precisely this issue in his
article “Developing more water-sensitive
cities”. He comments on what students
are thinking — and learning — about
water and wetlands, and how final-year
civil engineering students are encouraged
to consider how to develop more ‘water-
sensitive’ cities. As part of this broad
approach, he touches on how some have
looked at the role that wetlands can play
in urban drainage, and the challenges of
ensuring water security for growing African
cities in a highly variable climate.
Helgard Muller, in his article titled
“Icebergs and Hunger Stones”, comments on
how, over the centuries, the human race has
been able to reduce hunger through scientific
and engineering developments, but, despite
water being stored in dams and having
sophisticated water supply systems, we are
still vulnerable to droughts — as the past few
years have acutely proven.
So, what are we to make of all this?
Well, for one thing, the only constant is
change. Climate change, population growth,
urbanisation, and resource depletion
are the major global challenges facing
humankind, and these issues are all most
prevalent in our cities. With one in four
large cities facing water stress, and water
demand projected to increase by 55% by
2050, city leaders and developers must act
now to meet future needs.
As the new skipper at the helm of Water,
Sewage & Effluent, I hope that the magazine
can give you some insight into the issues
outlined above, and at the very least, some
interesting reading. Since I value and rely
heavily on your expert opinions, views,
and insights, please feel free to email me
at [email protected] to share
your pearls of wisdom, suggestions, and
comments. I’d love to hear from you!
Tarren
Water Sewage & Effluent November/December 2018
1
I
f anything ‘good’ has come of Cape Town’s
recent water crisis, it’s that it has alerted
major cities to threats to their own water
supplies. According to the Arup report
(Arup is an independent firm of designers,
planners, engineers, consultants, and
technical specialists), Cities Alive: Water
for People, released in September this year
and endorsed by the International Water
Association (IWA), cities need to expand
what they might now consider ‘their’ water
infrastructure to include the entire river
basin on which they depend.
The report, which was launched at the
IWA World Water Congress & Exhibition
2018 in Tokyo, Japan, highlights that the
world’s 100 largest cities occupy less than
1% of the planet’s land area, while the basins
that provide their water resources cover
over 12% and serve almost a billion people.
Water basins are vital for supplying cities
with water, collecting all the surface water
and groundwater in the area. Cities impact
stewardship for hundreds of miles. They have
the potential to influence how their water
basins are managed, yet they invest very little
in them.
Basically, the report calls for more
‘upstream thinking’ in how cities approach
water management. It presents an economic
pathway of addressing the challenges of
population growth and climate change
in our cities. To move towards a more
sustainable future, it is critical that cities
adapt, so that they can address these
contemporary challenges.
Understanding how a city’s water basin
behaves does not only lead to better water
management, but can protect the local
environment and ensure the well-being
of residents. The Arup report outlines
recommendations for successfully managing
and maintaining water issues, including
how governments, businesses, and water
organisations should be working with land
owners and land managers further upstream
to reduce risks, improve water quality, and
encourage more sustainable water sources.
“It’s really about people taking
responsibility for building water-wise
cities — cities that are connected to their
basins, designed in a water-sensitive way,
and delivering services that are sustainable,
flexible, and robust,” states Corinne
Trommsdorff, programme manager: Cities
of the Future at IWA. “Building water-wise
communities is the key to achieving that.
Water for people is also water by people.”
Dr Mark Fletcher, global water leader at
Arup, said, “Recognising the importance of
Hunger Stones, icebergs, and upstream thinking