Modern Mining July 2024
GREEN MINING
Water woes - mining sector extends a helping hand
South Africa’s water situation is dire – regions in the country are often without the precious resource for weeks, and sometimes months, at a time when our water quality continues a downward spiral. Modern Mining spoke to the Federation for a Sustainable Environment’s (FSE), Chief Executive Officer, Mariette Liefferink, about South Africa’s current water situation and how the mining sector is investing in infrastructure development to help alleviate some of the country’s water woes.
The sewage pollution of the Bloubankspruit within the core of the Cradle of Humankind World Heritage site.
“A ccording to the World Bank Group, South Africa will be sustainable management of water and sanitation for all, by 2030. As it stands, a funding gap of R333 billion is anticipated over the next ten years and a projected 17% water deficit by 2030.” South Africa’s water crisis is caused by insufficient water infrastructure maintenance and investment, recurrent droughts driven by climatic variation, inequities in access to water and sanitation, deteriorating water quality and a lack of skilled water engineers. Liefferink explains that following the South African Human Rights Commission’s (SAHRC) 2021 Report, which arose from an inquiry into the sewage pollution of unable to reach its SDG6 goals, that is ensuring availability and
with some rivers pushed beyond the point of recovery. It also stated that more than 50% of South Africa’s wetlands had been lost and of those that remain, 33% are in a poor ecological condition. “The DWS’ National Eutrophication Management Strategy for South Africa (2022) supports the findings of the National Water and Sanitation Master Plan and reports that South Africa itself has some of the most highly enriched surface waters in the world. It found that eutrophication challenges in South Africa are exacerbated by insufficient wastewater infrastructure and investment; deteriorating ecological infrastructure; recurrent droughts driven by climatic variation and an inescapable need for water resource development; inequities in access to safe sanitation, against the
the Vaal and the rivers of Tshwane, failing Wastewater Treatment Works (WWTWs) are a problem nationwide, rendering Constitutional rights vulnerable. “The Commission found that the situation regarding WWTWs and pollution of South Africa’s water resources is dire and widespread and, given the breadth of the challenges and their impact on large numbers of people, the SAHRC stated that the situation could lend itself to being declared a national disaster in terms of the Disaster Management Act.” So appalling is our water situation that the Department of Water and Sanitation’s National Water and Sanitation Master Plan (2018) reported that between 1999 and 2011 the extent of main rivers in South Africa classified as being in poor ecological condition increased by 500%,
22 MODERN MINING www.modernminingmagazine.co.za | JULY 2024
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