Danville Park Girls’ High School in Durban North, KZN, was recently awarded first place at the National Water Explorer Awards event that was held at the Durban Botanical Gardens.
The Water Explorer programme is a two-year collaboration between the UK NGO Global Action Plan (GAP) and the international banking firm HSBC that aims to engage learners in eleven countries around the world in understanding how water affects lives, and in taking practical action to protect and save water in their schools and communities. The top five South African schools selected this year were Danville Park Girls High and Wyebank Secondary in Durban, Scottsville Primary in Pietermaritzburg, John Wesley Primary in Eshowe, and The Birches Pre-Primary in Pinetown. The winning school received a Water Explorer Tap trophy and R15 000 towards their eco-projects, while the four runner-up teams were each awarded R5 000 towards their projects.Going digital to save water
Danville Park Girls High School faced tough competition but impressed the judges with the way the whole school participated across a number of Water Explorer challenges. These included a massive paper saving drive that they undertook after they learned about the huge water footprint associated with paper production: The 198 000 sheets of paper used by the school each year equates to 1 980 000 litres of water. Subsequently they have gone digital wherever possible and have improved their paper recycling drives through better communications in the school and running inter-class competitions to save paper.Locating leaks
Wyebank Secondary School highlighted how important it is to locate leaks in the water supply system. Through examining their water bill and usage they were able to identify and stop illegal connections into their school’s water system.As a result they have reduced their water ‘wastage’ and water bill by more than half. Another initiative they have introduced at the school is a “Bring a Bottle (BAB) to School” campaign aimed at encouraging the 1 200 learners to save water by not drinking from running taps.
Their diverse water projects also extended to clearing all of the water-thirsty invasive alien plant species from their grounds.