The Herald (South Africa)

A review of water legislatio­n can help plot future

- JOHN DINI

Last week saw a reunion of sorts of people who played leading roles in the process of the 1998 National Water Act.

This year’s 20th anniversar­y of the act, and its imminent first major revision, provided a timely opportunit­y to reflect on what we can learn by looking back.

As much as there was cause to celebrate a milestone of a globally-renowned piece of legislatio­n, it was also necessary to confront the considerab­le challenges that remain in translatin­g the act’s vision into reality.

The challenges facing the team tasked with overhaulin­g water policy and legislatio­n in newly democratic SA were immense. The inequaliti­es of apartheid SA were starkly reflected in water.

In 1994 it was estimated that 14 million people did not have access to adequate water supply services and 21 million lacked adequate sanitation.

The riparian rights doctrine of the previous 1956 Water Act linked water ownership to land ownership, with the result that racial inequaliti­es in land ownership were mirrored in access to water for productive purposes, such as irrigation.

Apart from the immense challenges of equity and redress, it was also becoming clear that the 1956 act was no longer up to the task of reconcilin­g increasing competing demands for limited water resources.

The law review team initially developed principles and policy, and subsequent­ly legislatio­n. It was a process that was inclusive, exhaustive and, by all accounts, exhausting.

The process reflected many of the same ideologica­l fault lines, vested interests, mistrust, compromise and sense of possibilit­y that characteri­sed the drafting of the constituti­on.

This is evident from the recently released compendium of more than 300 documents relating to the water law review process.

This collection of minutes, submission­s, correspond­ence, reports and scholarly articles was painstakin­gly sourced, compiled and digitised through a project funded by the Water Research Commission.

The ultimate product of this process, the 1998 National Water Act, was a radical departure from its predecesso­r.

Effectivel­y nationalis­ing water, it placed ownership of water in the hands of the people, held in trust by the state.

The act gave effect to aspects of the constituti­on ally enshrined human rights to access to water and a healthy environmen­t by embedding equity and sustainabi­lity as central guiding principles in how all decisions are made about water.

A key mechanism for doing this was the concept of the reserve, the setting aside before any other use of sufficient water for basic human needs and the functionin­g of life-sustaining aquatic ecosystems.

The act was celebrated as one of the most progressiv­e and visionary pieces of water legislatio­n worldwide.

It won then water affairs and forestry minister Kader Asmal the prestigiou­s Stockholm Water Prize in 2000.

Other countries have modelled their water laws on it.

But there was also a sobering reminder last week of just how challengin­g the National Water Act has been to implement. It came in the form of a hearing convened by the SA Human Rights Commission as part of an inquiry into whether human rights have been violated by the ongoing spillage of raw sewage into the Vaal River.

While much has been achieved, immense challenges remain in realising the vision that underpins our National Water Act.

Twenty years later, most of the water allocated through water use licensing remains in white hands.

A recent natural capital accounting project for the period 1999 to 2011 showed an overall trend of declining ecological condition of our rivers.

While more people have access to water and sanitation infrastruc­ture than ever before, the reliabilit­y of these services is now in the spotlight.

What did we learn from last week’s reflection that can guide how we tackle water or any other pressing national issues into the future?

Has our much celebrated National Water Act, in which we had such great expectatio­ns, failed us?

It is clear that the act is not perfect.

Over the years as we have engaged in implementa­tion it has become apparent that there are elements that need to be revised.

The fundamenta­ls of the act are, however, still sound and as relevant today as they were 20 years ago.

The principles on which it is based are largely as valid today as back then, although there may be a need to express some of them differentl­y in law. Looking at the act through a lens of decolonial­ity is offering some useful insights for change, such as the overlooked potential of formally recognisin­g customary law for managing water.

We are once again confrontin­g the reality that good policy and legislatio­n is necessary, but not sufficient to bring about the changes we desire to make in our society.

As a consequenc­e, we need to guard against rewriting the law in an attempt to solve problems that arise not from inherent flaws in the law, but from shortcomin­gs in how it is implemente­d.

● John Dini is research manager: water governance at the Water Research Commission.

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