Skills evaporate in water sector

The country's "chronic" shortage of engineers in municipalities is having a detrimental effect on the quality of drinking water and the ability of municipalities to prevent crippling water losses.
Skills evaporate in water sector
© Kidsana Maimeetook – 123RF.com

This is according to Manglin Pillay, CEO of the SA Institution of Civil Engineers, who was speaking after the release of a damning report into the state of the country's water services last week.

The "Municipal Benchmarking Initiative" report from 2015 - compiled by the SA Local Government Association and the Water Research Commission - found that the country did not have even 10% of the number of engineers required to run its municipal water networks effectively.

There were, according to the findings, just 0.4 engineers to every 100,000 people, a far cry from the five per 100,000 Saice says South Africa needs.

The report states: "There is a chronic shortage of municipal engineers in South Africa.

"Of great concern is that municipalities have a significant infrastructure asset but do not have the engineering capacity to manage it."

A short-term target of 0.9 engineers per 100,000 people had been set, a number that the report calls "far from ideal".

Pillay said: "There are absolutely dire consequences. If there are no engineers then nobody is doing any planning - and planning isn't for a year or two - it's for 20, 30 or 40 years down the line."

The shortage meant that infrastructure was not properly maintained and programmes were inadequate, he added.

Councils were struggling to deal with high levels of water wastage, the report said.

Source: The Times


 
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