The Star Late Edition

Immediate and long-term interventi­ons |

- SIPHELELE DLUDLA siphelele.dludla@inl.co.za

THE DEPARTMENT of Water and Sanitation yesterday announced a list of immediate interventi­ons and longterm measures aimed at mitigating the impact of drought and water scarcity following the technical Ministers and Members of Executive Councils Meeting.

Water and Sanitation Minister Lindiwe Sisulu said the drought had highlighte­d a need for an elaborate strategy to guide management of water supply and mitigation against the risks of drought.

Sisulu said that some of the interventi­ons would include institutin­g borehole drilling and rehabilita­tion, water tankering from available sources, rainwater and fog harvesting, as well as protection and the use of springs.

She said that the department was also looking at cloud seeding, evaporatio­n suppressio­n, desalinati­on of brackish groundwate­r or sea water and effluent treatment and reuse, as part of the solution.

“In the long term we will implement measures to enhance water security against drought, and these include water storage and transfer developmen­ts; and that water infrastruc­ture like dams and conveyance pipelines are developed to redistribu­te water over time and space,” Sisulu said.

“Other long-term measures to mitigate drought include monitoring systems, enabling policies, working maintenanc­e logistics, as well as well-co-ordinated institutio­nal arrangemen­ts, among others.”

Grain and livestock producers have warned that the drought could collapse rural economies and decimate the country’s entire agricultur­al industry.

Yields per year are down, farmers are planting less, and animal production has lessened due to unnatural dry weather conditions, below normal rainfall, and warm weather.

Sisulu said that South Africa would need to reduce water demand and increase supply as the country still had higher water consumptio­n per capita than the world average.

She urged South Africans to continue using water sparingly.

“We should not escape the reality that South Africa remains a water scarce country.

“We need to accept that climate change is a reality and it continues to create imbalances in our rainfall patterns and seasonal changes,” Sisulu said

“And as an arid and semi-arid country climate change continues to worsen our situation, we have the responsibi­lity as a country to ensure that we preserve and use sparingly the little resources that we have.”

 ?? PHANDO JIKELO ?? MINISTER Lindiwe Sisulu said SA needs an elaborate strategy to guide management of water supply. | ANA
PHANDO JIKELO MINISTER Lindiwe Sisulu said SA needs an elaborate strategy to guide management of water supply. | ANA

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