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Minister Senzo Mchunu reinforces South Africa’s commitment to ensure water security at the UN 2023 Water Conference 

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Minister Senzo Mchunu reinforces South Africa’s commitment to ensure water security at the UN 2023 Water Conference 

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Minister of Water and Sanitation Senzo Mchunu

23rd March 2023

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Minister Senzo Mchunu has reinforced the South African Government’s commitment to ensure water security by 2030 and beyond, while also working improving and enhancing sanitation related services in the country. 

Minister Mchunu was speaking during a discussion at one of the United Nations Water Conference side events taking place at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, USA on 22-24 March 2023.

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The side event, themed, “Multistakeholder Commitments to the Water Action Agenda - Integrated Water and Climate Solutions – From Science to Decisions to Actions,” sought to get various participants at the conference to commit to decisions that are taken to improve water action agenda globally and translate them to action. 

“South Africa is a water scarce country and our strategy for managing the impact of climate change mainly focusses on efficient use of limited water resources; investing in water conservation and demand management; increased sustainable use of groundwater aquifers as well and pursuing other potential sources such as sea water desalination, amongst others,” said Minister Mchunu. 

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Addressing representative member states, Minister Mchunu added that the Government of South Africa, through the Department of Water and Sanitation, is working collaboratively with civil society formations, organised labour, the financial sector, organized business and the research fraternity to develop and implement a comprehensive strategy on water resilience in the country. 

“For example, at the same time as investing in additional water storage capacity, we are mobilizing all spheres of government and sectors of society to conserve water and to use it more efficiently. This multipronged approach has enabled us to manage severe climate change events such as the extraordinary drought currently being experienced in the Nelson Mandela Bay metropolitan municipality in the Eastern Cape,” he said. 

Minister Mchunu further detailed that to prevent the Metro from running dry, all spheres of government and civil society are working together to develop new sources such as boreholes and sea water desalination; while simultaneously vigorously implementing water conservation and demand management measures, including reducing leakages in the water system, pressure management, punitive tariffs for high water usage, as well as an intensive awareness campaign to get business and households to use less water.  

“This model enables the development of water services that are inclusive and gender transformative. When there is limited water access, it is the poor who suffer the most because they have less ability to procure alternative sources of water and it is usually women who bear the brunt. In the context of climate change and water scarcity, our approach is to ensure a minimum basic supply of water to all rather than a lot for a few and no water for many,” he added.

Minister Mchunu concluded by reinforcing the Ministry approach to enhancing public-private sector collaborations for the financing and management of water resource and water services infrastructure. 

These includes commercial loan financing and public private partnerships, as well as non- commercial collaboration to meet mutual interests. 

“For example, we are implementing US$1.3 billion project with mining houses to construct a bulk pipeline to supply water to new mining areas while simultaneously distributing water to villages along the pipeline, on the basis of a 50:50 contribution by government and the private sector,” concluded Minister Mchunu. 

The three-day UN 2023 Water Conference is co-hosted by the Governments of Tajikistan and the Netherlands under the theme “Midterm Comprehensive Review of the Implementation of the Objectives of the International Decade for Action, “Water for Sustainable Development”, 2018–2028”.

 

Issued by the Department of Water & Sanitation

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