Andrew Tanner, specialist consultant – water resources management
I presented the example of the Incomati and Maputo River Basins, which stretch across parts of South Africa, Swaziland, and Mozambique. The necessary political accord was established in 2002, when Mozambique, South Africa and Swaziland ratified the Interim IncoMaputo Agreement in terms of which they agreed to cooperate in the sustainable management of the Incomati and Maputo basins for the mutual benefit of the three countries. Key stakeholders from the three countries developed the following shared vision for the basins:
• A sustainable riverine environment
• An improved quality of life and water for economic development
• Protected and sustainable water resources
• Development of dams to enhance water availability
• Agreement on future IWRM scenarios
To develop IWRM strategies and plans, Aurecon employed a wide variety of engineering and scientific disciplines. The first step was to assemble, integrate and correlate baseline information from the three countries to arrive at agreed data sets and maps. This encompassed: • Hydrological analysis and calibration of the hydrological model of the basins
• Assessment of water resources infrastructure, including modelling the yields of sub-catchments and dams
• Assessment of present-day and historical land use
• Quantifying present and projected future water use
• Status of and water requirements for environmental protection
• Determination of current and future water balances per sub-system
• Water quality assessment
• Assessment of opportunities for water conservation and demand management in each water use sector
• Feasibility assessments of potential new bulk water resource infrastructure The project enabled the officials of the three countries to share a common understanding of the opportunities, challenges and limitations that the available water resources hold for future developments. Progress to a vision
“The integrated development scenarios, combining environmental water requirements, proposed socio-economic developments and their associated water use, with future water resource management and infrastructure development plans for each basin, irrespective of the international boundaries, provided an agreed, shared, achievable plan for the future,” comments Tanner. Aurecon has played an important role in making the achievement of the vision for effective water management in the Incomati and Maputo Basins a reality:
• The IWRM strategies and plans for each basin provide the authorities in each country with an agreed framework for a wide range of water resource management and development activities
• Through its leading role in two of the 11 IAAPs and assistance with the other IAAPs, Aurecon has assisted in the creation of an enabling environment for cooperative governance of the Incomati and Maputo River Basins, as well as to facilitate the establishment of a River Basin Organisation Lessons learned
The case study was discussed and debated at the conference, and this yielded a number of lessons and recommendations:
• There is a need for more demand-side management research by water management institutions
• Greater coordination of efforts from all stakeholders is required
• Consensus-driven water management should be promoted by broadening the scope of involvement beyond the realm of the water specialists
• There is a need to identify common areas of research to enable efficiency and continuity *photo credit Lani van Vuuren / Water Research Commission