Recent regulations from the department of water and sanitation (DWS) will hopefully overcome the long delays in securing water use licences and allow for a more streamlined implementation of projects, said Manda Hinsch, partner and principal water and environmental scientists at SRK Consulting. According to Hinsch, the new regulations are a positive step that aligns the timelines for Water Use Licence Authorisations (WULAs) for those who have applied for environmental authorisations as required by the National Environmental Management Act (NEMA). “Both processes now promise authorisations within 300 calendar days, if all documents and studies are in order,” Hinsch said. “In the past, receiving water use authorisation could take up to three to five years.” She said these delays often led to applicants simply starting project construction without the necessary authorisation, since the positive socio-economic impact of proceeding was deemed to outweigh the negative environmental impacts. She added that assessment processes within the department were not always well-monitored, and it was therefore difficult to track the stage at which an application within the process had reached. “This problem should now be eliminated since clear responsibilities, with timeframes, are allocated to both the applicant and the relevant water authority,” she said.
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