Water, Sewage & Effluent September-October 2017 | Page 21

Another challenge to the environment is the ongoing practise of ‘trade- off’ between the developers and Johannesburg City. Fairall elaborates: “Urban wetlands have a buffer zone of 30 metres. Within this space, there is nothing you can save hydrologically or environmentally. This land is used to trade with the developers. It’s not a statuary limitation, it’s just what the national, provincial, and municipal governments agreed on, viz, there must be a buffer zone between the edge of the wetlands to the edge of the first habitation/development,” he says. It appears that the authorities have little understanding of the sensitivity of the wetland environment, randomly assigning what they see as a safe distance between a development and a wetland. “In an urban environment, it’s 30 metres and in rural areas it’s 50 metres,” Fairall explains. “However, the moment something is threatened with extinction, for example our limited crane population, suddenly the powers *In Singapore, access to water is universal, affordable, efficient, and of high quality. Innovative integrated water management approaches, such as the reuse of reclaimed water, the establishment of protected areas in urban rainwater catchments, and the use of estuaries as freshwater reservoirs have been introduced along with seawater desalination, to reduce the country's dependence on water imported from neighbouring country, Malaysia. – Wikipedia. Water Sewage & Effluent September/October 2017 19 Ecological trade-off that be determined that the cranes need a 500 metre buffer zone.” If the authorities were genuinely aware of the wetland nature, however, they would also understand that bullfrogs require a 1 500-metre buffer zone, at least, but that doesn’t play out accordingly, while the platanna requires two kilometres of buffer zone, which would be unheard of. It’s not only the authorities that appear ambivalent about water, but the public too is guilty. As Fairall points out, people are seemingly unaware of (or disinterested in even understanding) the water cycle, the part that wetlands play in ecology, or how they can add to (instead of taking away from) the environment. “Regrettably, only when they realise that everything around them is dying, will people realise the part they play in the destruction of wetlands,” he concludes. u to importing pumps to bypass the procurement process. The pumps are delivered by sea, resulting in a three to four-month lapse between breakdown and delivery to the pump station — and raw sewage pours into the dam during this time. implemented six years ago, Fairall points out. He continues that, owing to the delay, the future is looking pretty bleak for water consumers in the country, and he predicts that we will “run out of water”, starting in 2018. Fairall says that there is a profound lack of management within the water sector, and it’s not only new infrastructure that is required, but also maintenance. “If you use the vast sewers under Rome and Paris as examples, these structures are 2 000 years old and still fully functional, owing to regular maintenance,” he points out. In contrast, the top eco estate at Hartbeespoort Dam, Xanadu, has serious problems with the wastewater treatment plant that serves 14 of the suburbs around Schoemansville. “They all have pump stations where they have to pump the effluent uphill to the Rietvlei wastewater works. While all pump stations should each have two pumps, at the height of the present water problems, in Brits and Malepeng, not one station was running on two pumps.” In addition, he says, not one of the 14 pumps were interchangeable; they were all varying makes and ages, defying any type of service etiquette that determines parts replacement and so on. Instead, it’s “run until it breaks,” Fairall comments. Municipalities are financially broke and cannot get any form of credit, he explains, forcing them to resort Tracks of a Cape clawless otter in the moist soil of a wetland; an increasingly rare sight.