Integrated management of multiple water sources for multiple uses: rural communities in Limpopo Province, South Africa

Authors

  • Barbara van Koppen International Water Management Institute, P Bag X813, Silverton 0127, South Africa
  • Moritz Hofstetter International Water Management Institute, P Bag X813, Silverton 0127, South Africa
  • A Edward Nesamvuni University of Venda, P.O. Box 6796, Thohoyandou 0950, South Africa
  • Quinex Chiluwe QRC Consulting, PostNet Suite 9, P/Bag X108, Centurion 0046, South Africa

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/wsa/2020.v46.i1.7870

Keywords:

rural water services, community-led, self supply

Abstract

This study fills a knowledge gap about low-income rural communities’ holistic management of multiple water resources to meet their multiple needs through multiple or single-use infrastructure. Six low-income rural villages in Limpopo Province were selected with a diversity in: service levels, surface and groundwater resources, public infrastructure (designed for either domestic uses or irrigation but multiple use in reality) and self-supply (people’s individual or communal investments in infrastructure). Focusing on water-dependent livelihoods and water provision to homesteads, distant fields and other sites of use, three policy-relevant patterns were identified. First, most households have two or more sources of water to their homesteads as a vital buffer to irregular supplies and droughts. Second, infrastructure to homesteads is normally for domestic uses, livestock and, for many households, irrigation for consumption and sale. Public infrastructure to irrigate distant fields is multiple use. Exceptionally, self-supply point sources to distant fields are single use. Water bodies to other sites of use are normally multiple use. As for large-scale infrastructure, multiple-use infrastructure is cost-effective and water-efficient. Third, in four of the six villages people’s self-supply is a more important water source to homesteads than public infrastructure. In all villages, water provided through self-supply is shared. Self-supply improves access to water faster, more cost-effectively and more sustainably than public services do. In line with international debates, self-supply is there to stay and can be supported as a cost-effective and sustainable complementary mode of service delivery. A last potential policy implication regards community-driven planning, design and construction of water infrastructure according to people’s priorities. This may sustainably harness the above-mentioned advantages and, moreover, communities’ ability to manage complex multiple sources, uses and multiple-use infrastructure, whether public or self-supply, as a matter of daily life.

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Published

2020-01-30

Issue

Section

Research paper

How to Cite

Barbara van Koppen (2020) “Integrated management of multiple water sources for multiple uses: rural communities in Limpopo Province, South Africa ”, Water SA, 46(1 January). doi:10.17159/wsa/2020.v46.i1.7870.