Cape Town as a city has always captured global
headlines. It was nominated the best city of 2017, for the fifth year
running, in the Telegraph Travel Awards, a poll of 90,000 readers in the UK. So a water crisis in the destination of choice
only elevates such interest. An article in the LA Times recently stated how Cape Town
found water savings that California never even dreamed of – highlighting some
of the successes of the city’s water usage campaign. UCT lecturer Kevin Winterhowever looks at five
key lessons other cities can learn from how the city managed the water
crisis. – Stuart Lowman
By Kevin Winter*
Postponing Day Zero in Cape Town for 2018 comes as
no surprise. There was no sense to it once the day had been pushed into the
winter rainfall period. It also didn’t make sense for the Western Cape and Cape
Town governments to continue drafting detailed logistical plans for points of water distribution
in the event that taps were turned off across the city.
But
Cape Town’s water supplies remain at high risk because the long-term
predictions for rainfall in the south-western Cape remain uncertain. Dam levels
continue to fall while people are struggling to achieve the city’s target of
450 million litres per day. And yields from new water schemes will only be
known in the coming months and next year.
The
general perception is that the onset of climate change would be slow and
measured. This would afford authorities the time to intervene with considered
plans. But climate change is a disrupter and takes no prisoners. Over the past
three years, Cape Town and the surrounding regions has experienced successive
years of well below average rainfall. The experience is changing the way
people think about water and how it is managed.
There
are five key lessons that have been learnt so far:
1. Adaptation to climate change
The
big lesson is being better prepared to deal with a prolonged drought. Cape Town
was, and continues to be, under prepared. Over 95% of the city’s water comes from surface
water dams. After three years of below average rainfall, the lowest on record,
the dams are now running on empty.
Sixty
years ago the Australian city of Perth was in a similar position with most of
its water supply from dams. The Australian Big Dry drought changed everything.
Over 50% of their water supply comes from desalination plants and 40% from
groundwater.
A water resilient city should be capable of
reducing risk by diversifying water sources to include supplies from
groundwater, storm water, reused water, treated effluent and desalination.
Resilient, water sensitive cities also integrate the whole urban water cycle
into its water resource management system. This means, for example, being
smarter about capturing rainfall across the city, in storing storm water
underground, and in reusing treated effluent for a variety of purposes not
necessarily for drinking purposes.
Cities are the new catchments. There should be
no reason to hesitate on implementing these actions. They won’t only climate
proof the city, they’ll also make them healthier and more sustainable places to
live.
2.
Cities lead
National
government can’t be expected to lead cities in dealing with water scarcity and
drought. This is the experience of many cities dealing with water scarcity.
Local governments are in a better position to take decisive action and act at a
local scale where they can engage citizens, communities and businesses in
averting the water crisis. National governments are slow to intervene, and when
they do their actions are often not at the right scale or timely enough.
Cities
need more autonomy to act decisively, although proactive, inter-governmental
support and cooperation is both helpful and necessary.
3. Measure more, manage better
‘You
can’t manage what you don’t measure’ should be the rallying cry for improving
the quality of data and analysis needed to support and inform decisions. A city
without reliable data will struggle to implement strategic plans and
priorities. A good example is Melbourne, one of the first cities in the world
to implement digital water metering throughout the city.
Measuring
and monitoring is essential to understand water demand and flows. But not all
data are useful and more data adds little value in the absence of robust
analytical and reporting systems.
4. Mixed messages
Public
responses to communication and messaging put out by local authorities is often
unpredictable. And social media is rapid and unrelenting in its criticism of
messages. Politicians and officials often don’t correct these perceptions which
can result in misinformation being shared. The City of Cape Town’s public
awareness website has been recognised worldwide– for example by the American Water Works Association – as one of the
best. But hard evidence does little to change public opinion.
What
citizens really want to know is what actions are being taken to alleviate the
crisis and relieve the risk. In the case of Cape Town the city has been
reporting on the state of the water by supplying information on dam levels, water demand, models and water quality.
What it hasn’t done well enough is contain the level of misinformation shared
in the public domain and media.
5. Public trust
Above
all, public trust is key to encouraging water saving and helping to establish
confidence in managing the crisis. Trust is strengthened by a combination of
factors. These include honest, credible messaging when progress towards
averting the crisis is demonstrated and understood, and when ordinary citizens,
communities and businesses are engaged in making a meaningful contribution.
Trust gains momentum when citizen voices are heard and when politicians and
officials respond accordingly.
Large
cities that have experienced ongoing water crises, such as Sao Paulo, are often
criticised for failing to establish public-private agreements and robust partnerships.
Planning for uncertainty
How cities anticipate and prepare to adapt to drought conditions
depends on factors such as their financial, technical and human capital.
But if
cities are going to become more resilient and responsive to climate change then
a search for new water supplies will be necessary. It is also essential to
establish new forms of governance. Innovative approaches need to be explored
because we might not yet know what these should look like. The future is
uncertain, but there is a lot that can be done right now and we need to learn
some hard lessons.
·
Kevin Winter, Senior Lecturer in Environmental &
Geographical Science, University of Cape Town. This article was
originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
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