2 research outputs found
Sustainable urban water management in Cape Town, South Africa: is it a pipe dream?
The City of Cape Town (South Africa) faces numerous challenges in respect of water supply, drainage
and sanitation services. It is hypothesised that the potential for long term
sustainability in urban water
systems can be established through the application of a five component
sustainability index. This paper
describes the development of such an index, the “Sustainability Index for Integrated Urban Water
Management” (SIUWM), for specific application to southern African cities. It reviews the results from
initial testing of the index on Cape Town, discusses its usefulness in terms of sustainability assessment,
and provides a way forward for continuation of the research. It concludes that, by drawing on the
numerous connections that link the different aspects of urban water management, the SIUWM is able to
highlight several critical areas of “unsustainability” in the City and shows that sustainability will remain
a pipe dream if these challenges are not addressed systematically and urgently
Approaching community-level greywater managementin non-sewered settlements in South Africa
This study investigates sustainable options for community-level management of greywater in low-income
settlements without on-site waterborne sanitation in South Africa. As a consequence of the limited resource
base of both the local authorities and the inhabitants of the settlements, these options need to be inexpensive,
technologically simple and socially acceptable. A variety of social and technological options are thus being
implemented in collaboration with the inhabitants and the local authorities, and their efficacy evaluated.
The hypothesis is that involving the inhabitants in the development of solutions is likely to be more effective
in the management of greywater in these settlements than the traditional approach where the local authorities
provide rudimentary engineered services after minimal consultation. Following an initial scoping study
that covered six of the nine provinces of South Africa, four settlements in the Western Cape Province were
selected for a second, more detailed study. The study employs the Participatory Action Research (PAR)
method which emphasises participation, collaboration and consensual decision-making with the goal of
ensuring long term sustainability of social and technological interventions