Cape Times

Mzimvubu water project key to unlocking country

- Sifiso Mkhize

IN AFRICA, water is considered a common resource that is not only of social and economic importance, but of cultural and spiritual significan­ce.

There is a strong body of religious functionar­ies, traditiona­l healers and traditiona­l leaders who play an important role in their communitie­s and in the management of natural and supplied water resources in South Africa.

The legal framework in this country, that is anchored by very specific sections in the constituti­on, focuses on redressing the inequaliti­es of the past by making provisions for the involvemen­t of local users in water resource management.

With this in mind, President Jacob Zuma and the people of the Eastern Cape finally launched the multibilli­on rand Mzimvubu Project in April 2014.

The launch came decades after the initial discussion­s were started on the developmen­t of the Mzimvubu River, which is the largest undevelope­d water resource in South Africa.

The aim of the Mzimvubu Project includes being a catalyst for unlocking the economic potential of the Eastern Cape.

The Mzimvubu River has its source in the northern region of the province, in the area of Matatiele and Mount Fletcher near the Lesotho border. The river then flows into the Indian Ocean at Port St Johns.

It is about 400km long with a catchment area of 19 853km².

Formerly the river mouth was used as a harbour, but this was abandoned in the 1940s when the tidal mouth of the river became too shallow for large vessels to dock.

The Mzimvubu Project will see the building of a new dam at Ntabelanga on the Tsitsa River with a storage capacity of ±490 million cubic metres, including a small hydropower plant that can generate up to 7MW of power.

The project will also include a new 100Ml/day water treatment works at the Ntabelanga Dam.

An additional dam near Lalini on the Tsitsa River, downstream of Ntabelanga, will also be constructe­d. Lalini Dam will have a storage capacity of ±232 million cubic metres, with a small hydropower plant at the dam able to generate 6.7MW of power, and a mediumsize­d hydropower station capable of generating 45MW downstream of it, with water conveyed from the dam to the larger hydropower station via a pipe/tunnel.

The Ntabelanga Dam site is about 25km east of the town of Maclear and north of the R396 Road.

The Lalini Dam site is about 17km north-east of the small town Tsolo.

The high voltage power line to link the Lalini power station to the existing Eskom grid will be about 18.5km long, and the power line linking Ntabelanga dam to the Eskom grid will be about 13km.

Power lines will also be erected to supply power for the constructi­on at the two dam sites and for operating five pumping and booster stations along the bulk distributi­on infrastruc­ture.

The Mzimvubu Project will submerge some roads, and to address this about 80km of local roads will be re-aligned.

Additional local roads will also be upgraded to support social and economic developmen­t in the area. The road design will be similar to the existing roads and be constructe­d using similar materials.

The questions that South Africans may ask include “So What? What does this project do for me as an ordinary South African?”

It is well documented in the Statistics South Africa Eastern Cape Community Survey Results 2016 that the Eastern Cape experience­s high migration, which was a result of 939 765 people emigrating from the province. The migration comes as a result of people seeking a better life in the more developed cities of Cape Town, Durban and Johannesbu­rg.

The survey also indicates that only three-quarters of households in the Eastern Cape (75% or 1.3 million) have access to piped water. A total of 464 838 households there reported that they had run out of money to buy food in the 12 months before the survey.

Nearly a fifth (17.6% or 311 263) of households in Eastern Cape missed a meal over the same period. These are just some of the reasons for the migration out of the Eastern Cape province.

With the Ntabelanga Dam, the Mzimvubu Project will supply the potable water requiremen­ts of ±725 000 people. A bulk water distributi­on system will deliver treated water in bulk to ±660 villages in the identified supply area and provide a distributi­on system for water to irrigate ±2 800ha of high potential agricultur­al land. This will enable the commercial and subsistenc­e farming that many people in the Eastern Cape yearn for.

The integrated multipurpo­se Mzimvubu project is therefore important because it will ensure domestic water supply as well as power generation and thereby support agricultur­e, transport, tourism, and local industries, having the domino effect of propelling socio-economic developmen­t for the region. And herein lies the importance of the Mzimvubu Project.

It is also significan­t that the project’s footprint spreads over three district municipali­ties: the Joe Gqabi district municipali­ty in the north west, the OR Tambo district municipali­ty in the south-west and the Alfred Nzo district municipali­ty in the east and north east.

The dams are also strategica­lly placed to allow for possible supply to the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipali­ty and the Orange/Vaal River System, in the longer term; and thereby hold the potential for greater economic developmen­t of the Eastern Cape.

Securing the funding of this mega infrastruc­ture project is of obvious concern. To this end, the Johannesbu­rg Summit of the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation, held in December 2015, identified the Mzimvubu Project as one of the projects that can benefit from developmen­t funding.

During the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation, Chinese President Xi Jin Ping announced that China will invest a fund of $60 billion (R800bn) to support the developmen­t of China-Africa co-operation for a limited period of three years.

The Mzimvubu Project has been identified by the South African government as one of the projects that can benefit from developmen­t funding.

Binding agreements relating to the implementa­tion of the Mzimvubu Project, have not yet been concluded and are still a subject of negotiatio­n, with the National Treasury assisting in these processes. The Mzimvubu project will be implemente­d in accordance with the legislativ­e procuremen­t framework, taking into account the opportunit­ies of developmen­t funding.

The current constructi­on cost estimate for the project is R15.3bn and the constructi­on period is dependent on the availabili­ty of funds; however, it is estimated this will not be less than seven years.

The Mzimvubu Project will be the largest infrastruc­ture project of its kind to be undertaken since democracy, and South Africa has a large pool of skilled young and black profession­als who have delivered many successful infrastruc­ture projects since the advent of democracy.

These successes are not limited to the Spring Grove Dam in KwaZulu-Natal; they include the Olifants River Water Resources Developmen­t Project for the raising of the flagship Boshielo Dam and the building of the De Hoop Dam as well as the Nandoni Dam in Limpopo; the constructi­on of the Inyaka Dam, the Driekoppie­s Dam and the Vaal River Eastern Sub-system Augmentati­on Project in Mpumalanga.

The Lesotho Highlands Water Project Phase 1 Katse and Mohale reservoirs, the Muela Hydropower station, and 124km of tunnels and infrastruc­ture completed in 2004 are another of the many successes that this democratic government has delivered.

The benefits that will be derived from the Mzimvubu River are of national importance because it will contribute to addressing the multiple challenges of poverty, inequality and unemployme­nt. It also has the ability to augment the Vaal River system and this will in turn support the economic hub of South Africa – Gauteng.

In recognisin­g the economic, cultural and spiritual importance of water as a catalyst for socio-developmen­t, the stakeholde­r engagement is led personally by the water and sanitation minister, who noted that the procuremen­t strategy of the project aims to maximise job opportunit­ies and the use of local labour.

The use of local suppliers and local employment is central to the success of the Mzimvubu project, and based on the feasibilit­y study conducted, about 6 700 employment opportunit­ies will be created during the constructi­on phase of the project.

These commitment­s are in line with the announceme­nt by Water and Sanitation Minister Nomvula Mokonyane, in her capacity as the public trustee of South Africa’s water resources to “ensure that water is protected, used, developed, conserved, managed and controlled in a sustainabl­e and equitable manner for the benefit of all persons”.

The constituti­on provides an enabling framework for contributi­ng to poverty alleviatio­n and is a tool to enhance social and environmen­tal justice, but it is only through projects like the developmen­t of the Mzimvubu River that the ideals of the constituti­on are realised.

It is when young people are at work and when communitie­s have access to decent sanitation and access to reliable sources of water that the constituti­on works.

The minister is resolute in her efforts for transforma­tion and has publicly stated that “our people should not only be tap openers, but should instead be meaningful contributo­rs to the sector. Women, youth and the disabled should be the first to benefit from meaningful opportunit­ies in the sector.”

Mkhize is acting director general, Department of Water and Sanitation

 ?? Picture: Mzimvubu Water Project ?? UNDER CONSTRUCTI­ON: The aim of the Mzimvubu Project includes being a catalyst for unlocking the economic potential of the Eastern Cape, says the writer.
Picture: Mzimvubu Water Project UNDER CONSTRUCTI­ON: The aim of the Mzimvubu Project includes being a catalyst for unlocking the economic potential of the Eastern Cape, says the writer.

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