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Water
is South Africa's lifeblood and scarcest resource. The
country's average annual rainfall of 497mm is well below
the world's average of 860mm. At current levels of supply
and demand, South Africa will run out of water by the
year 2030. Without sufficient water we cannot produce
enough food, support industrial growth or develop a tourism
industry. Our economy is therefore totally dependent on
a continual supply of water of sufficient quality and
quantity.
Paradoxically, wetlands are one of the most threatened
habitats in the world today. It is estimated that more
than 50% of South Africa's wetlands have been permanently
damaged, mainly through agricultural development and inappropriate
land management. Those that remain constitute the country's
most threatened natural areas. That this amounts to a
national crisis and a fundamental obstacle to achieving
the goals of poverty alleviation and sustainable development
is not in question. The challenge now is to implement
effective solutions.
One solution is to conserve water catchment systems. The
Baviaanskloof Conservation Area in the Eastern Cape, for
instance, is the sole catchment for the thriving agro-economy
in the Gamtoos Valley and is the major source of water
for the rapidly growing Port Elizabeth/Uitenhage metropole.
The Table Mountain Fund funded a report on the importance
of the area to attract the interest and participation
of national and international conservation and funding
agencies in supporting a development plan for it.
Funding
has also been made available, by the National Parks Trust
of South Africa, through WWF-SA, to achieve integrated
water resource management for the Blyde, Sand and Klaserie
river systems. This will conserve the water resources
and unique biodiversity of the area while catalysing socio-economic
development and contributing to local poverty alleviation.
For conservation, management and impact assessment purposes,
it is important to be able to make judgments about the
conditions of each of South Africa's wetlands. The Green
Trust* therefore funded a pilot project to evaluate the
proposed South African Wetland Classification System and
The Table Mountain Fund has taken this further by funding
a project that will serve to start a detailed inventory
wetlands for the Western Cape.
WWF's freshwater goal globally? Says Jamie Pittock, Director
of WWF's Living Waters Programme: 'To secure water for
people and nature by conserving the world's sources of
water freshwater ecosystems, ensuring people's
access to water and sanitation, and improving the efficient
use of freshwater.'
Click
here to view all our Freshwater projects
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