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Department of Water Affairs Water Requirements and Availability Reconciliation Strategy for Mbombela Municipal Area Water Conservation and Water Demand.

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Presentation on theme: "Department of Water Affairs Water Requirements and Availability Reconciliation Strategy for Mbombela Municipal Area Water Conservation and Water Demand."— Presentation transcript:

1 Department of Water Affairs Water Requirements and Availability Reconciliation Strategy for Mbombela Municipal Area Water Conservation and Water Demand Management Component 30 April 2013

2 To make more effective and efficient use of the existing and available water resources by all water use sectors in the study area; To develop realistic water saving targets for the respective water use sectors and quantify the impact on current and future water requirements in the study area; To enable the Catchment Management Agency (CMA) and the Department of Water Affairs (DWA) to “free-up” additional water, which can be put to beneficial use in the public interest; Objectives

3 To conserve water and avoid or delay the implementation of further expensive schemes for transfers and storage which may not be necessary if water is used efficiently; and To provide necessary information to support the implementation of compulsory licensing and related water allocation reforms. Objectives…

4 System Input Volume Authorised Consumption Revenue Water Non Revenue Water Billed Authorised Consumption Unbilled Authorised Consumption Apparent Losses Real Losses Water Losses Billed Metered Consumption Unbilled Unmetered Consumption Unauthorised Consumption Customer Meter Inaccuracies Leakage on Transmission and Distribution Mains Billed Unmetered Consumption Unbilled Metered Consumption Leakage on Service Connections up to point of Customer Meter Leakage and Overflows at Storage Tanks Free basic WCWDM Key Performance Indicators Environmentally and financially unattractive Water security and efficiency Efficiency and financial viability

5 Efficiency and Non-revenue water System Input Volume = 400 ℓ/c/d Revenue Water Non- Revenue Water = 20% System Input Volume = 40 ℓ/c/d Revenue Water Non- Revenue Water 80% Low non-revenue water but inefficient water use High non-revenue water but very efficient water use Augmentation not recommended Augmentation a possibility System Input Volume = 400 ℓ/c/d Revenue Water Non- Revenue Water = 40% High non-revenue water and inefficient water use Augmentation not recommended

6 Strategy Targets – Efficiency Target 180 to 200 litres per capita per day Impacts on water security and next augmentation – Non-revenue water >50% target 40% 30% to 50% target 25% <30% target 15% Impacts on revenue and water use efficiency – Water losses Same as NRW with unbilled consumption not more than 5% of system input volume Financially and environmentally not acceptable

7 Nelspruit

8 White River / Rocky Drift

9 Hazyview

10 Nsikazi North

11 Nsikazi South

12 Karino/Plaston corridor

13 Matsulu

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15 15

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18 Mbombela Targets Indicator Current Value Realistic Target Optimistic Target System Input volume (million m 3 /a)54.7148.8743.03 System Input volume (Mℓ / day)149.79133.80117.80 Billed Authorised Consumption (million m 3 /a)26.7328.6229.07 Unbilled Authorised Consumption (million m 3 /a)8.908.276.47 Water Losses (million m 3 /a)19.0811.987.49 Non-revenue Water (million m 3 /a)27.9820.2513.96 % Non-revenue water51%41%32% % Water Losses35%25%17% Input Volume (litres / capita / day)277247218 Input Volume (m 3 / household / month)322926 Authorised Consumption (litres / capita / day)180187180 Authorised Consumption (m 3 / household / month)212221

19 Target Summary Area NRW (%)Water Losses (%)Efficiency (l/c/d) Current Realistic Target Current Realistic Target Current Realistic Target Nelspruit27%20%22%15%723614 White River37%30%32%25%470423 Karino15% 10% 137 Matsulu80%60%40%30%292248 Hazyview55%40%48%30%485413 Nsikazi North60%50%33%25%179170 Nsikazi South60%50%45%30%235211 Mbombela51%41%35%25%277247

20 Interventions INSTITUTIONAL / LEGISLATIVE INTERVENTIONS Institutional review Training and education Customer charter, policy, bylaws FINANCIAL INTERVENTIONS Effective metering and billing Water tariffs Informative billing SOCIAL INTERVENTIONS Consumer Awareness Campaign Consumer Help and Support Desk Schools awareness TECHNICAL INTERVENTIONS Bulk metering Sectorisation Active Leakage Control Valve audits Leak and logging equipment Telemetry Retrofitting and removal of wasteful devices Mains replacement Pressure management Control valve management Consumer metering Top consumer audit GIS / CAD system Management Information System Water loss monitoring and audits

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23 Recommendations Setup task group (political, technical, finance) to meet on monthly basis to discuss WDM issues – losses, billing, leak repairs, etc. Fill vacancies, training & capacity building Focus on record keeping and management information Comply with legislation, regulations and RPMS Resolve intermittent supply Review tariff structures Fix all visible and private leaks

24 WCWDM Regulations under WSA R509 of 2001 Reg (3) Community awareness and customer service Reg (3) and (4) – Eradicate intermittent supply Reg (10) – Water audit as part of WSDP Reg (11) – Water balance and sectorisation Reg (12) – Repair of leaks Reg (13) – Consumer metering Reg (15) – Pressure management

25 Way forward Improve management information Adopt strategies and business plans Include budgets in IDP Implement WC/WDM programme Report to Water Affairs on – Key performance indicators – Actions – Successes and failures – Plan  Do  Check  Act

26 THANK YOU

27 Irrigation: Overall conclusions Irrigated agriculture in the Mbombela Municipal area is generally under serious threat due to a number of key factors including: – Reducing assurance of supply due to growing erosion of available water resources to other sectors – Reducing water quality – Rapidly escalating pumping (electricity) costs which are effectively forcing higher levels of water use efficiency. – Low morale in the agricultural sector (affecting investment and productivity).

28 Irrigation: Overall conclusions… Consequently the irrigation sector is unlikely to be willing to further reduce its supplies through water trading. Cutting back on unlawful water use is one way of making more water available to legitimate users, or for further licence allocations.


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