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Kobus Jooste Research Unit Information Services Section 21 nd February 2012. 2012 State of the Nation Address. A Water Resource Management Perspective. Overview. Re-affirmation of Government’s commitment to promoting industrial and infrastructure development in South Africa
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Kobus Jooste Research Unit Information Services Section 21nd February 2012
2012 State of the Nation Address A Water Resource Management Perspective
Overview • Re-affirmation of Government’s commitment to promoting industrial and infrastructure development in South Africa • This development has direct and indirect water management and allocation implications • Contrasts with Government’s commitments regarding attaining Millennium Development Goals, Rural agriculture development capacity. • Threatens regional and International agreements regarding water resource management and reducing carbon emissions.
Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) • R248 Million set aside over 2 financial years to combat AMD
Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) • Industrial development typically has a hidden environmental cost. • In terms of Gold and Coal mining in Gauteng and Mpumalanga, there are two major water-related costs to mining: • Demand for water from mining activity • Impact on water quality as a result of mining activity • Contrasts with White Paper on Water Policy • Water resource management priorities not considered during issuing of mining and prospecting permits by DME
Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) • Mpumalanga Province is a catchment source for many major regional rivers • Some of these waterways are shared with other countries, with water management agreements in place • Mining has already polluted some rivers in Mpumalanga to the extent that water required for mining has to be brought in from Vaal Dam. • More mining can threaten this system as well • 12 million consumers and 60% of South African economy depends on Vaal River System
Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) • Allocation to combat AMD very conservative • In 2009, the CSIR calculated that the cost of treating acidified water in Witwatersrand Goldfields alone would cost R1 050 000 (at R3000/m3) per day • WWF estimates the total remediation cost of AMD from abandoned mines to be R30 billion • These costs are not taken into account when coal fired power stations are advocated as supplying “cheap” electricity.
Overlapping land use jurisdictions • DME, DEA, DAFF, DWA all have individual Strategic Plans in place for areas earmarked to be affected by coal mining and prospecting in the near future. • These activities are mutually exclusive. • Sustainable management of scarce water resources not prioritised • Resulting in South Africa having lowest score on African continent in latest Environmental Performance Index and Pilot Trend Environmental Performance Index (ranked 128 out of 132 in the world).
Overview • Re-affirmation of Government’s commitment to promoting industrial and infrastructure development in South Africa • This development has direct and indirect water management and allocation implications • Contrasts with Government’s commitments regarding attaining Millennium Development Goals, Regional and International agreements regarding water resource management and reducing carbon emissions.
Bulk Water Supply Infrastructure • Expansion of Bulk water supply Infrastructure
Bulk Water Supply Infrastructure • Major commitments in 2012 address towards upgrading and expansion of rural bulk water supply infrastructure • This water supply will be crucial in achieving growth in agriculture, mining and industrial development over the coming decades • Concerns around delays in taking projects from announcement and planning phases to completion • In 2010, DWA had 1155 vacancies, mostly in critical technical, engineering and scientist positions
Bulk Water Supply Infrastructure • Of particular importance to rural development : • Mtatha revitalisation project • The Mzimvubu Water Project • Raising of Clanwilliam and Hazelmere dam walls • The Olifants River Water Resources Development Project • All of the projects listed above have partial or total focus on rural development. • Even without more implementation delays, these projects are mostly large-scale, with a relatively limited area of influence* • Need for complimentary projects based on alternative methods of rural agriculture development
Implications for Parliament • 2012 Adress, with a focus on coal mining and coal-fired power generation expansion, clashes with 50% of DEA problem Statements in the latest Situation Analysis: • Continued reliance on fossil fuels • Mine waste management • Impact of mining on the environment • Degradation of wetlands • Declining health and water quality of aquatic ecosystems • Clear need for country’s developmental goals to be met, but without threatening sustainable water resource management and agricultural capacity.
Suggested Actions for 2012 • On Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) • Clarity needed on the true cost of clean-up and planned remedial action, especially on abandoned mines • Potential for utilizing cleaning processes to supply mines with industrial grade water • Urge more effective co-ordination of policy and practice between DME and various Departments tasked with Land and Environmental Affairs • On Bulk Water Supply Projects • Liaise continually with implementing departments regarding development timelines • Engage relevant departments regarding plans to improve on critical capacity shortages