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DRAFT POLICY ON INTEGRATED WATER QUALITY MANAGEMENT

Purpose

The purpose of the draft Integrated Water Quality Management (IWQM) Policy provides framework towards managing water quality in South Africa and is approved by Cabinet for public comments.

Background

South Africa is faced with water challenges, both quantity and quality, which, if not addressed effectively, has the potential to significantly limit the economic growth of the country. The deterioration of water quality in rivers, streams, dams, wetlands, estuaries and aquifers impacts on the economy; on human health; on aquatic ecosystems and reduces the amount of water available for use.

The National Water Act (NWA), 1998 (Act 36 of 1998) provides a framework for the protection, use, development, conservation, management and control of water resources for the country as a whole. Chapter 2 of the NWA makes provision for the development of strategies in order to facilitate the proper management of resources. The National Water Resource Strategy-2 (NWRS2) provides the overall framework for water resource management in the country. The deteriorating water quality is as a result of the effluent discharges from urban and industrial areas, seepage and discharges from areas that support mining, and pollution from intensive agriculture. The combined effects of poor water quality have a significantly negative impact on socio-economic development in South Africa.

Effective management of water quality in South Africa is thus a developmental issue, not simply an environmental issue, and must be addressed by Government (not just the Department of Water and Sanitation) in collaboration with its partners in civil society and the private sector. Without a radical improvement in integrated water quality management, worsening water quality will continue to decrease the socio-economic and environmental benefits and increase the costs associated with the use of the country’s water resources. This has resulted in the Department of Water and Sanitation reviewing its water policy of 1991 and align with the new development and government imperatives.

There are seventeen Principles that underpin the IWQM Policy to ensure that the approach to Water Quality Management is structured, transparent and predictable.

POLICY PRINCIPLE POLICY POSITION DESCRIPTION OF THE POLICY PRINCIPLE

PRINCIPLE 1:

GOVERNMENT-WIDE IWQM

It is the constitutional duty of all spheres of government to protect the quality of South Africa’s water resources. The policy calls for an intergovernmental approach to WQM.

PRINCIPLE 2:

PEOPLE-CENTRIC

Public participation is a crucial element of IWQM and must be promoted to ensure active and engaged citizenry.

PRINCIPLE 3:

SUBSIDIARITY AND

ACCOUNTABILITY

Water quality must be managed at the lowest appropriate level and the institutions responsible for managing water quality must be held accountable.

PRINCIPLE 4:

TRANSBOUNDARY IWQM

Water pollution has spatial dimensions that cross an array of administrative and natural boundaries. International, national, provincial and local boundaries do not typically align with natural boundaries creating an array of planning, management and operational challenges that need consideration.

PRINCIPLE 5:

PARTNERSHIPS

In order to manage water quality effectively, partnerships must be developed between government, the private sector and civil society. The policy calls for the formalised approach to partnerships to support IWQM.

PRINCIPLE 6:

ADMINISTRATIVE FAIRNESS AND

IMPLEMENTABILITY
Regulation must be administratively fair, and must also be effectively implementable within technical and financial resource constraints.

PRINCIPLE 7:

ADOPT ADMINISTRATIVE

PENALTIES
A system of effective administrative penalties for water pollution offences must be adopted. The policy calls for a penalty system to deal with polluters.

PRINCIPLE 8:

AN INTEGRATED AND ADAPTIVE

APPROACH
An integrated and adaptive, systems-based resource, remediation and source directed approach which manages the water resource system as a whole at catchment or sub-catchment scale will be adopted, e.g. to include integration between “quality” and “volume”, integrated planning and integrated regulation. Emerging areas of concern further include unconventional gas development as well as carbon capture and storage development.

PRINCIPLE 9:

HIERARCHIES OF POLLUTION MANAGEMENT

Pollution management will follow a hierarchy of decision-making permeated by: • Prevent, where possible. • Minimise, where possible or be subjected to specific licence conditions or minimum standards. • If the above options have been exhausted, then the Precautionary approach applies minimum standards. • For catchment specific responses, a differentiated approach is applied. This allows for continuous improvement and adaptive management approaches. Rehabilitation and reclassification will be applied in catchment specific contexts as needed.

PRINCIPLE 10:

PROMOTION OF GREEN/ECOLOGICAL INFRASTRUCTURE RESTORATION AND REHABILITATION

Rehabilitation and restoration of catchments will be pursued, including the use of green/ecological infrastructure. The policy calls for the inclusion of green/ ecological infrastructure in the management of water quality.

PRINCIPLE 11:

RISK-BASED APPROACH

A risk-based approach to regulation will be adopted, based on the likely magnitude of potential impacts. The Policy calls for the regulation based on the understanding of the magnitude of the pollution risk.

PRINCIPLE 12:

WATER QUALITY IS A DEVELOPMENTAL ISSUE

In addressing the management of water quality, the developmental, economic, social and environmental impacts of deteriorating water quality must be taken into account.

PRINCIPLE 13:

BROADENED FUNDING MECHANISMS

The mechanisms for funding integrated water quality management must be broadened, given that water quality has impacts on, and is impacted by, many different sectors, and recognising the negative developmental impact of declining water quality. The policy calls for a shift away from just the traditional funding mechanisms.

PRINCIPLE 14:

POLLUTER PAYS

The costs of remedying pollution, degradation of resource quality and resulting adverse health effects, and of preventing, minimising or controlling pollutions is the responsibility of the polluter.

PRINCIPLE 15:

INFORMED PUBLIC

Efforts to ensure that broader societal awareness of the importance of resource water quality will prove increasingly important in catalysing more responsible behaviours.

PRINCIPLE 16:

DATA IS A STRATEGIC ASSET

Data on water quality must be standardised, reliable and scientifically defensible and must be collected, managed and protected as a strategic asset for monitoring, management, legal actions and research purposes, while also being used to support co-learning and adaptive management. The policy signifies the importance of data as a strategic asset in the management of water quality.

PRINCIPLE 17:

PUBLICLY AVAILABLE INFORMATION

Information and data on water quality and waste discharges must be available in the public domain and should be used to enhance public awareness and education, and to support adaptive management approaches.

The Department of Water and Sanitation is in the process of gazetting the Integrated Water Quality Management (IWQM) Policy to afford the public and society as a whole an opportunity to make written submission.

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