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Home Economics Infrastructure

Call For Inputs On Draft Water Rehabilitation Guidelines

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
September 11, 2025
in Infrastructure
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Call For Inputs On Draft Water Rehabilitation Guidelines
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The Department of Water and Sanitation has invited stakeholders to submit comments on the Draft Rehabilitation Management Guidelines (RMGs) for Water Resources by 29 October 2025.

Developed in line with Chapter 3 of the National Water Act (Act 36 of 1998), the guidelines aim to strengthen the protection, use, conservation, management, and control of water resources in an efficient, sustainable, and equitable manner in South Africa.
According to the department, the RMGs, which have been under development since 2020, provide step-by-step measures to guide water users in rehabilitation measures/interventions that can be followed for each water resource.

“The guidelines identified and categorised five water resource themes into rivers, wetlands, estuaries, groundwater, as well as lakes and dams, as per the definition of the NWA, and further outline five phases to be followed to undertake the process of rehabilitation,” the department said in a statement.

They include:


  • Diagnostic Phase, which entails determining the conditions and the type, size, and extent of impacts on characteristics of watercourses.
  • Planning and Assessment aimed at the assessment and collation of available information from maps and datasets on the affected watercourses and the review and assessment of legal considerations.
  • Defining Rehabilitation Objectives, which provides the objective of rehabilitation to ensure the impacts on the characteristics of watercourses are addressed.
  • Execution Phase, which involves providing recommendations on techniques and methods to address impacts identified. Consideration is also given to the protection of water resources, ecosystem services, people, and livelihoods.
  • Monitoring, Evaluation and Reporting Phase, which involves overseeing the monitoring, evaluation, and reporting of maintenance and rehabilitation interventions.

The department recently held a public consultation in Pretoria, bringing together stakeholders from government, catchment management agencies, water boards, research institutions, civil society, and the private sector to discuss the draft guidelines and proactive measures to address water quality degradation promote rehabilitation and restoration to maintain water ecosystem function.
Consultations have also taken place through sector platforms such as the Project Steering Committee, Freshwater Ecosystem Network, Catchment Management Fora, Western Cape Estuaries Task Team, and intergovernmental engagements between Water and Sanitation, Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), Water Research Commission (WRC), as well as the 2024 Wetland Indaba.

“Stakeholders are expected to provide inputs on the draft guidelines [covering] rivers (Volume 1), wetlands (Volume 2), estuaries (Volume 3), lakes and dams (Volume 4), and groundwater (Volume 5), including Guidelines in Practice Report by no later than 29 October 2025.

“This can be done by using the link: https://www.dws.gov.za/wem/rehabguidlines.aspx. Stakeholders are requested to forward their inputs and/or comments to Kgotso Mahlahlane at MahlahlaneK@dws.gov.za and copy Samkele Mnyango at MnyangoS@dws.gov.za,” the department said.
Originally posted on SAnews.gov.za



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