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SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October...

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SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012
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Page 1: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THENATIONAL WATER RESOURCE

STRATEGYNRWS2

Presentation to the PPC23 October 2012

Page 2: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Water Affects all Aspects of South Africa’s

StategyObjectives

Policy/Levers

Timing/Sequencing

Skills

Water Security

Energy Security

Environment incl Climate Change

Competitiveness

Funding/Affordability

Econ

omic

Gro

wth

&

Tran

sfor

mati

on Job

Gro

wth

Equi

tabl

e Sh

are

1994

2060

Society/Citizens Wellness

Access to Information

SOURCE: M Rossouw 2010

LEVE

RS –

Fro

m “

Polic

y” to

Acti

on

Objectives

To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose

Page 3: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Good Strategy Demands - ABCDA - A Solid Fact Base,

B - Clear Direction,C - Evaluation of all Strategy Options.D - Test for Implement-ability

Page 4: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

NWRS2 - Is not a StrategyRather, it seeks to open up more policy debate…

• The NWRS2 identifies:

• 11 Core Strategies

• 7 Technical Strategies

• 4 Governance Strategies

• 4 Enabling Strategies and

• 79 “Key Strategic Activities”

• Too much Duplication too few actionable plans are proposed

• Lack of timeframes or assignation of responsibilities

• NWRS2 effectively outlines the strategies needed to develop a strategy!!

• Clearly no differentiation between Facts, Objectives, Strategies and Plans

Page 5: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

FIXING WHAT IS NOT BROKEN AND NOT FIXING

WHAT IS BROKEN!• NWRS2 throughout reflects clear frustration at government’s failure over the past 8 years to

make progress in achieving its water related goals.

• This has led to a number of proposals that should be interrogated, not just for their

intentions, and whether they are likely to achieve them, but also for what they reveal about

the Department’s analysis of its challenges.

• While there is certainly a need for better management, there is a multitude of new

concepts proposed, such as

• “water footprints”, “source to tap, tap to source” applications, “multi-purpose development”; “multiple use

services approach”, “multi-parameter decision-making”, “complex system management”, “multilateral

networking and coordination” as well as undefined “smart technologies”.

Page 6: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Old Policy Challenges Renewed

Missing is a discussion of the experience to date. Part of the

problem is that efforts to use water management and

allocation as a tool for empowerment have been largely

unsuccessful.

This is acknowledged in the regional perspectives where , in

passing, the document notes that water has been set aside

for black farmers but not taken up in the Orange ,

Mogalakwena, Pongola, and Fish basins and that, in

addition, extensive under-utilised resources are available in

areas of KwaZulu Natal and the Eastern Cape in rivers such

as the Thukela, Umzimvubu and Mbashe.

Page 7: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Administrative IssuesWater shortage or Water

licencing?Given the importance of administrative process to enable

the implementation of the NWA, the lack of recognition

of the underlying administrative problems is

discouraging.

The overarching challenge is not equity but the fact that,

in many parts of South Africa, all water is being used and

there is no additional water to allocate.

This means that some water has to be taken from

existing users if new needs are to be met.

Page 8: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Private Sector Specifically and Water Users in General

Partners or Culprits?• One obvious response to the acknowledged lack of capacity in government and public agencies is to

mobilise more support from outside.However, there is a schizophrenic attitude in the NWRS2 to the

private sector specifically and water users generally. In some parts of the report, they are presented as

part of the solution:

• “… if one looks across the entire water sector, including government, the private sector and civil society, there is a range of skills, knowledge and

capability in some areas that can be drawn on for the implementation of the NWRS-2. The challenge lies in mobilising these skills and resources to a

common end whilst urgently building more capacity in other critical areas.”

• Elsewhere however, they are presented as part of the problem:

• “A major gap in the management model is that water resource management is not effectively institutionalised in water sector business management.

This has resulted in water related sectors and industry not giving water the attention and priority it deserves, and a lack of ownership, commitment and

self-regulation in the private sector. A recent study revealed that many South African businesses are not prepared for managing potential water risks.”

• It is acknowledged that

• “There is a strong commitment from a number of significant enterprises and organisations to work closely with DWA to improve water management

across the country. Some industries and business have not only initiated actions in this regard, but have set world class examples in terms of developing

water footprints, water master plans and committing themselves to effective and smart water management.”

Page 9: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Decentralisation for Participation or Administrative Convenience?

• The proposal to reduce the number of Catchment Management Agencies (CMAs) is

significant. The NWA called for the establishment of 19 CMAs.

• The decision to change from 19 to 9 CMAs has apparently already been taken although

the proposal is formally still under consultation (the NWRS2’s regional appendices are

presented in terms of the new boundaries making comparison with NWRS1 very

difficult).

• Nonetheless, this is one case in which the NWRS2 addresses a current challenge by

proposing an administrative simplification, which should be commended, provided that

the disadvantages are addressed. NB: Reducing the number of CMAs increases the

complexity of managing boundary issue.

Page 10: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Water Conservation and Demand Management (WCDM)

Key Strategy or Just a Slogan?

• The commitment to WCDM has been in place since 2004 (and, before, in the 1997 White Paper).

• However, it is not clear that much progress has been made. Targets have been set (including a “Presidential Outcome” for 2014) but, once again, there is no reporting on trends or challenges in meeting targets, which appear increasingly unrealistic.

• A series of actions is proposed but there is no analysis of the experience so far and how the proposed actions are intended to address the challenges that have emerged.

Page 11: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Information, its Impact and its Absence

• The NWRS was conceived as an instrument that would allow society to monitor the overall water resource situation of the country, to inform its societal response, not just the response of the narrow water sector.

• Consequently, it is disturbing to note that information generation is one of the weakest areas of the NWRS2. This is recognised:

• In terms of the requirements of the NWA, the NWRS must present updated water balances and perspectives.

• Unfortunately, due to a lack of investment and resourcing, these water balances were not updated, and the present water situation could therefore not be presented.

Page 12: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Lack of Information & Knowledge can Lead to Serious errors - research

• The NWRS fails to use the excellent research skills and recourses we already have yet it sets out to establish new approaches.

• “Strategic action” proposed:

• “Establish a viable funding model for the sourcing and allocation of financial resources to water sector R&I”

• The existing Water Research Commission, is the envy of many more developed countries.

Page 13: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

The Financial Dimensions are Weak and Confused

• Covered in four separate sections:-• Water economics 38

• Core Strategy 9: Embedding sustainable business principles and practices79

• Core strategy 10: Implementing a water sector investment 81

• Enabling Strategy 1: Water finance and funding 167

• It is stated that an investment framework has been developed, but this is not presented.

Page 14: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Critical Question

• Does NWRS2 accept the policy foundation established in the White

Paper and NWA (which the NWRS1 sought to give effect to) or

• Does it seeks to change policy in key respects, in the proposed

review of the NWA?

Page 91 -“58. DWA will revise the National Water Act, the Water Services Act and

the Water Research Act by the first half of 2013”!

Page 15: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

State of RSA Water

• It is less about policy but rather more about a failure to

implement policy effectively.

• NWRS2 identifies many problems but fails to provide

practical proposals to deal with the problems

Page 16: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Summary Conclusions

• NWRS2 contains a wide range of ideas and proposals,

often with little evidence to underpin them and not

always coherently or consistently presented.

• This makes it difficult to draw firm conclusions.

• It does not follow the structure of NWRS1 nor the

requirements of the NWA, which makes it difficult to

evaluate.

Page 17: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

Recommendations

1.Greater focus, prioritisation and clarity,

2.Clear focussed interventions, not a collection of the latest policy fashions.

3.Establishing institutions and systems to manage the difficult process of:

a) Reallocating water between competing users

b) Operate the national water infrastructure in a technically and financially sustainable manner.

Page 18: SUMMARY COMMENTS ON THE NATIONAL WATER RESOURCE STRATEGY NRWS2 Presentation to the PPC 23 October 2012.

END

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