Forestry at the Bi-Annual Groundwater Conference, Bloemfontein, Free
State
8 October 2007
Distinguished guests
Programme Director
Ladies and gentlemen
It is a great pleasure for me to be part of this important conference at
which experts, researchers, managers, and other stakeholders engage one another
on how groundwater resources can better be managed in a sustainable manner.
As one travels around dry parts of South Africa, far away from rivers and
other surface water resources, one cannot fail to notice windmills dotted
around farmsteads over vast areas of land. That is an indication of the
important role that groundwater plays in rural people's lives.
Yet what is very clear to me is that there are still a lot of gaps in our
understanding of groundwater in South Africa, with policy makers having more
questions than answers: about how much ground water there is? To what extent
can we utilise this resource without causing damage to the environment? What is
the annual harvest potential of groundwater? How much ground water is current
being used? To what extent have we polluted our groundwater with mining and
possibly farming activities and other industrial activities?
Conferences such as this one, and the work being done by the people here
today, are therefore critical in helping us to understand how we can better
utilise this resource and help us to start answering these questions. I am sure
that everyone in this room will agree that thus far the government has put much
greater emphasis on surface water, to the point where we are able to determine
with a reasonable degree of accuracy â how much surface water we have stored in
our 320 dams, the water yield per annum from these dams, and the mean annual
runoff under natural conditions
The combination of our past approach that has placed greater emphasis on
surface water, our inadequate management of groundwater - I am informed that
there are only 310 monitoring points for groundwater, and the insufficient
numbers of hydro-geologists in the country has contributed to this lack of
sufficient knowledge of this critical water resource. It has also allowed a
situation where unscrupulous land users abuse the groundwater to the detriment
of the environment, to their neighbour's detriment, and other users.
South Africa's National Water Act is internationally recognised as one of
the most progressive pieces of legislation governing the management of water
resources as a renewable natural resource. This Act is founded on the vision of
government for a transformed South African society, a society where every
person has the opportunity to lead a dignified and healthy life and to
participate in productive economic activity. The Act is founded on the three
fundamental principles of equity, sustainability and efficiency. To fully take
forward the intentions of this Act, we need to better utilise our groundwater
as a means to supplying rural communities in particular with clean drinking
water, and we should be asking ourselves: how we can utilise groundwater to
assist our people to climb the water ladder and have access to higher levels of
service? And how can ground water contribute to our target of addressing the
remaining backlog in water supply and access to water for all?
Ladies and gentlemen, the knowledge and understanding of our groundwater
resources is very important if we are going to increasingly utilise this
resource. For example, what would happen if we went ahead and built hundreds of
small groundwater schemes â would they fail during the first major drought? Or
become polluted in just a few years? All the things that lie in your field of
expertise, like appropriate monitoring, early warning systems, water
conservation, and proper protection of each water source â all these areas
would need to be incorporated into any programme that is implemented and
addressed systematically.
We also cannot ignore what is already happening, where at a local government
level groundwater is being utilised by individual municipalities to service
their water needs. We therefore have possibly hundreds of managers at district
and local municipality, as well as at community level who need to be
capacitated and empowered. We have also seen what can go wrong when the
groundwater being used by poor communities gets contaminated such as in Delmas.
It is clear that we need a measured and comprehensive response to how we deal
with groundwater use by municipalities.
Programme director, South Africa is obviously not alone in this challenge of
effective utilisation of water and provision of water to its people, the World
Bank in its report of October 2006, entitled 'Sustainable Development of
Africa's Water Resources' describes Sub-Saharan Africa as a vast region which
sees too little water, or too much, in the wrong place, or at the wrong time.
In addition to challenges such as water stress and access, there are water
related challenges such as poverty, health, and food security, with the report
going on to state that while water and water systems are integrated resources,
the human response in development efforts is often not integrated.
Despite South Africa having taken Integrated Water Resources Management
(IWRM) as a guiding principle, this statement by the World Bank still holds
some truth for us. For example, it was recently pointed out to me that there is
an important relationship between wetlands and groundwater recharge, pointing
to further motivation for to the need to rehabilitate and restore our wetlands,
yet within my Department I see still some disconnect between the work that we
are doing to rehabilitate wetlands and the work we are doing in
groundwater.
It has also been pointed out that in our approach to IWRM there are still
some gaps in the responsibility of managing groundwater. Water resources can
only be successfully managed if the natural, social, economic and political
environments in which water occurs and used are all taken into account. An
integrated approach to the management of water resources is therefore required
in order to maximize the economic and social benefits in an equitable manner
without compromising the sustainability of ecosystems.
Going forward we are establishing Catchment Management Agencies (CMAs), a
core institution in our approach to IWRM. The question we need to ask is
whether we should institutionalise groundwater as part of IWRM and in the
institutions where the IWRM will be practiced, or should groundwater be treated
separately. If we do institutionalise groundwater as part of the work of CMAs
then what will this mean in terms of policy, planning, development, protection
of groundwater, and monitoring and assessment - so that it is done
comprehensively and not left to chance? There are those who argue that
groundwater as part of the IWRM can do many things for us, while I am sure
there are those who offer a strong counter position. Either way the law is very
clear that we should always strive to balance water use with protection.
Programme director, with the challenges faced by other African countries in
dealing with the provision of water and sanitation (in line with the Millennium
Development Goals) groundwater has taken on increasing prominence. This
importance was highlighted at a recent African Ministers' Council on Water
(AMCOW) meeting held in Brazzaville earlier this year. In recognising
groundwater's strategic importance for poverty alleviation and socio-economic
development in Africa it was noted that despite this importance, it has
remained a poorly understood and managed resource. AMCOW responded with two
very practical directions:
* firstly, to promote the institutionalisation of groundwater management by
river basin organisations,
* secondly, to create synergy with the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation
Initiative (RWSSI) to ensure groundwater's inclusion in resource assessment and
the sustainable management of groundwater resources.
And very significantly, as the main follow-on from Brazzaville, AMCOW is
presently establishing a Commission on Groundwater Management in Africa to
direct and co-ordinate a systematic, continent-wide thrust towards its
sustainable utilisation.
To conclude, ladies and gentlemen, in a situation characterised by climate
variability and resultant high surface water evaporation rates, groundwater
will play in increasingly crucial role in supporting our future water needs,
ensuring food security, and achieving greater equity amongst water users.
Already in some areas groundwater plays a critical role, not only in meeting
basic needs of the poor and the marginalised, but also as the most cost
effective and reliable resource in arid areas of the country, especially during
drought periods.
I have raised a number of questions in my address today and some of you may
already have these answers, and other issues that I raised could be tackled
during the deliberations at this conference, or could point us in the right
direction so we can have greater understanding of how better we can sustainable
utilise our groundwater resources. Some of the solutions might already lie out
there but require intense discussions by those involved in this area but may
also require other disciplines, such as social scientists or economists.
Our approach to using groundwater cannot be addressed in a piece-meal way,
and requires a new vision and a strategic approach in which government, the
private sector, academic institutions and civil society will need to work
together.
I wish you a successful conference and I look forward to your inputs.
I thank you
Issued by: Department of Water Affairs and Forestry
8 October 2007