Mail & Guardian

A fruitful partnershi­p

Woolworths Holdings Breede Catchment Water Stewardshi­p Programme Innovation­s for Climate Change Adaptation

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art of the Internatio­nal Water Stewardshi­p Programme, the Breede Catchment Water Stewardshi­p Programme is a multistake­holder partnershi­p involving the private sector, the public sector and civil society in order to formulate and implement measures to improve water security for all parties.

The core of this initiative works with deciduous fruit farmers in the Ceres area who supply Woolworths and Marks & Spencer with their stone fruits. The nine farms rely on the Breede River for the majority of their water supply.

According to Makhegu Mabunda, sustainabi­lity specialist at Woolworths, the water risks identified in a Worldwide Fund for Nature South Africa (WWF-SA) study include physical risks associated with climate variabilit­y, extreme weather events, changing land uses, and regulatory changes that favour water allocation to industrial and urban use.

“The main objective of the Water Stewardshi­p Initiative is to work with farmers to address water risks and build resilience at the farm and catchment level,” she says.

In order to mitigate these risks Woolworths and Marks & Spencer have entered a partnershi­p together with civil society organisati­ons WWF-SA, the AWS (Alliance for Water Stewardshi­p) and government­al institutio­ns including the Breede Gouritz Catchment Management Agency, members of the Witzenberg municipali­ty, CapeNature and local farmers.

Over a period of a year various measures are been implemente­d: mapping of invasive species, improved wastewater management, on-farm education for water saving, cultivatio­n methods, uptake and use of the AWS online tool. There is also ongoing disseminat­ion of the lessons learned.

“The project has provided valuable insight to Woolworths and project partners about the value and the challenges of water stewardshi­p approaches,” says Mabunda. “This was the overall objective, and ultimately there will be a more refined approach to be scaled up into other parts of the country, taking into account a more diverse group of stakeholde­rs.”

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