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Progress report on establishment of Water Management Institutions

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... projects in KZN and Mpumalanga - aligned with CMA establishment ... ESTABLISHMENT OF ADVISORY COMMITTEE AND NOMINATIONS FOR GOVERNING BOARD MEMBERS (3-4 months) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Progress report on establishment of Water Management Institutions


1
Progress report on establishment of Water
Management Institutions
  • PRESENTATION TO THE PORTFOLIO COMMITTEE
  • 06 SEPTEMBER 2006
  • Eustathia Bofilatos
  • Director WMIG

2
Contents
  • Transformation of Irrigation Boards into Water
    User Associations
  • Establishment of Catchment Management Agencies

3
Transformation of IBs to WUAs
  • Transformation of irrigation boards (IB) into
    WUAs is a statutory requirement in terms of
    section 67 of the NWA (Act 36 of 98)
  • Due date of transformation of IB to WUA was 6
    months after promulgation of the NWA
  • Due date was postponed to 2000
  • Process not concluded to date

4
Legal framework
  • Irrigation boards operate in terms of the 1956
    Act
  • WUA operate in terms of chapter 8 of NWA (Act 36
    of 98)
  • Voluntary membership promoted by the NWA (Act 36
    of 98)
  • WUAs do not have to comply with the PFMA unless
    they have government loans

5
Vision for WUAs
  • To promote self-determination in local water
    management, to stimulate economic development,
    especially among the poor and to utilise existing
    water management capacity to the benefit of the
    population
  • Inclusive membership organisations that provide
    quality services to the benefit of all its
    members, especially for productive water uses
    that are dependent on collective operation and
    maintenance of water supply infrastructure
  • Public awareness to maximise the ability of water
    user groups to use the WUA tool to their
    advantage, especially among historically
    disadvantaged individuals.

6
Statistics on water user associations
  • 279 Initial number of irrigation boards
  • 68 Transformed irrigation boards
  • 38 WUAs from transformed IBs
  • 211 Irrigation boards to be transformed
  • 23 New WUAs established

7
Internal challenges
  • Insufficient capacity in Regional Offices to
    prioritise transformation of IB and new
    establishments of WUA
  • Policies not in place by the time the due date of
    transformation completed
  • Interpretation of policies by both Head Office
    and Regional Offices not aligned
  • Establishment of WMI not done in coherent manner
  • Water allocation (entitlements) to HDI not in
    place as Water Allocation Reform has yet to take
    place.

8
External challenges
  • Policy implementation
  • Policy required extension of former IBs
    boundaries - required extensive consultation
  • Irrigation boards felt that it was not their
    mandate to consult outside their boundaries
  • Initially Government did not provide support for
    this process- (financially / technically)

9
External challenges
  • Cooperative government
  • Successes of WUAs depends on the business of
    agriculture (Department of Agriculture)
  • All water users need land in order to use water
    (Department of Land Affairs)
  • Water is just one input to local economic
    development (Local government)
  • Local government to sign off on establishment of
    WUA
  • Co-operation with Local Government has proved
    difficult in some areas

10
External challenges
  • Viability
  • Farmers are reluctant to establish due to
    challenges facing the future of the institutions,
    e.g.
  • Absence of financial support and after care to
    WUAs
  • Drought impacts upon viability
  • Agricultural issues can impact upon viability
    (market, increasing costs. etc,)

11
External challenges
  • Redress
  • HDIs do not have access to water and do not see
    benefits of joining WUA if they do not have water
  • Time is needed to promote equal understanding of
    IWRM
  • Capacity building requires time and money
  • Some irrigation boards see transformation as part
    of a political agenda of disempowering
    commercial water users
  • Government responsibility for consultation and
    public participation

12
Fast tracking establishment
  • DWAF is assisting irrigation boards to
  • transform (consultation/ public participation
    ) and is investigating seed funding possibilities
  • Focused pilot projects in KZN and Mpumalanga -
    aligned with CMA establishment
  • DWAF is reviewing the chapter on WUA in the NWA
  • To allow for smaller WUAs to be members of a
    larger WUA
  • Improved policies on WUAs need to be developed
    and implemented
  • Alignment in interpretation of policies between
    HO and regional staff is being addressed

13
CMAs Role
  • Manage water resources in a defined Water
    Management Area (WMA)
  • Co-ordinate the functions of other institutions
    involved in water related matters
  • Involve local communities in water resource
    management

14
Progress of CMA establishment
CMAS GAZETTED FOR ESTABLISHMENT AC PROCESS INITIATED AC PROCESS FIN BOARD APPOINTED
INKOMATI 19 March 2004 March 2004 October 2004 July 2005
BREEDE September 2004 September 2005 September 2006
CROC WEST 17 August 2005. Jan 2006 October 2006
MVOTI 20 May 2005. Jan 2006 October 2006
USUTU TUKELA OLIFANTSDOORN GOURITS July 2006 Dec 2006
15
Developmental Imperatives
  • pro-poor, developmental WMI represent interests
    of all stakeholders, especially poor/
    marginalised
  • More poor women and men using more water more
    productively- farming, livestock, fisheries,
    forestry
  • (Re-) allocation of water
  • Better sharing in benefits of water-based
    large-scale enterprises- farming, mining,
    forestry, tourism
  • Flood protection
  • Water is a social and economic good water use
    by the poor for multiple purposes is priority
    beneficial use
  • Community-based integrated water management for
    livelihoods is corner stone of the WMI

16
Time Frames - CMAs
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Inkomati
Mvoti Breede Croc West
Thukela Usuthu Gouritz Olifnts/Doorn
Olifants Upper Vaal Berg
Middle Vaal Levuvhu Limpopo Fish
Upper Orange Lower Orange Lower Vaal Mzimvubu
17
The Establishment Process
  • THE PROPOSAL DEVELOPMENT (1-2 years)
  • THE PROPOSAL EVALUATION (8 months)
  • MINISTERS APPROVAL (4 weeks)
  • PROPOSAL GAZETTING FOR COMMENTS (60 days) AND
    REQUEST FOR NOMINATIONS TO ADVISORY COMMITTEE (1
    month)
  • ANNOUNCEMENT OF ESTABLISHMENT (2 weeks)
  • ESTABLISHMENT OF ADVISORY COMMITTEE AND
    NOMINATIONS FOR GOVERNING BOARD MEMBERS (3-4
    months)
  • GOVERNING BOARD TRAINING (2weeks)
  • GB FIRST MEETING

AVERAGE 3 YEARS
18
Restructuring resource implications
  • Transfer of staff - 200 people
  • Funding for CMAs - R170 million over next 8 years
  • Fully functional CMA - 5 yrs
  • WRM tariff - less than 4 of the total water
    charge

19
  • Thank you
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