The Herald (South Africa)

‘New approach to water crisis needed’

Engineerin­g could hold key to the problem, says prof

- Siyabonga Sesant sesants@tisoblacks­tar.co.za

WITH the country in the throes of one of the worst droughts in decades, the government will have to “decolonise” engineerin­g if it is going to be a water secure nation. This was said by Professor Mike Muller at Nelson Mandela University (NMU) last night.

Muller spoke at the public lecture, held in conjunctio­n with the South African Academy of Engineerin­g, aimed to provide some perspectiv­e – through the lens of water – on the challenges that engineers and technical profession­s face in the 21st century.

It was the academy’s third annual lecture.

Academy president Truman Goba, who introduced Muller to the audience inside a packed lecture hall, said engineerin­g could hold the key to the water crisis.

The problem was that the issue was being used as a political football. “We all know that water is a scarce resource,” Goba said.

“We have to cut out the politics from it and deal with the reality of the situation and let decision-makers realise that things take time to happen.

“To provide water, you have to plan well ahead [so] it’s important that the resources are managed properly and that the skills available in the country are utilised.”

Muller, a former director-general in the Department of Water Affairs, described Cape Town’s water woes as “person-made”.

“Every city has different problems – and Cape Town’s is very much a man-made crisis – or, a person-made crisis because there are women involved,” he said. “[It is the] result of colonial attitudes. “In the Cape Town case, people were using European approaches, had European attitudes and took European decisions in a climate and society that isn’t European and then walked straight into a brick wall, or an empty dam, as a result.

“They thought they didn’t have to build new infrastruc­ture. The Europeans hate new infrastruc­ture, they don’t need it. Africa does.

“[The water problems in] Nelson Mandela Bay, while quite serious, are post-colonial problems.

“And as we talk about decolonisa­tion, we have to look at the problems of the old colonial approaches as well as the problems of the post-colonial era.

“The post-colonial challenge we have in Nelson Mandela Bay is that we now have a democratic government, but we have politician­s who don’t seem to understand what their role should be in terms of keeping a city like Nelson Mandela Bay water-secure.

“And so we have to ask the question, what’s gone wrong? This is not the decolonisa­tion we wanted, this is chaos.

“And I think we should think about decolonial­ising them [politician­s] because they’ve still got some colonial perception­s that have seriously damaged the city.

“Nelson Mandela Bay shouldn’t be short of water – yet it is,” Muller said.

The combined dam levels in both Nelson Mandela Bay and Cape Town are under 25%.

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: EUGENE COETZEE ?? PUBLIC LECTURE: Dr Oswald Franks, executive dean in the Faculty of Engineerin­g at NMU, and Professor Mike Muller, visiting adjunct professor from Wits University’s School of Governance
Picture: EUGENE COETZEE PUBLIC LECTURE: Dr Oswald Franks, executive dean in the Faculty of Engineerin­g at NMU, and Professor Mike Muller, visiting adjunct professor from Wits University’s School of Governance

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa