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Home » South Africa’s water sirens continue to ring, but more are starting to listen
Opinion

South Africa’s water sirens continue to ring, but more are starting to listen

Prof Anja du Plessis reflects on governance failure, public health risks, and fading accountability in a country running out of clean water.
Professor Anja Du PlessisBy Professor Anja Du PlessisDecember 9, 2025No Comments
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  • South Africa’s water infrastructure crisis is no longer a future threat but a lived disaster affecting health, livelihoods, and the environment.
  • Municipal failure, weak planning, and financial misconduct are driving a nationwide collapse in water services.
  • Accountability remains the missing ingredient despite overwhelming evidence of risk and injury to communities.

South Africa’s localised water crises are no longer looming threats but lived realities in many parts of the country. They are measurable, widespread, and increasingly visible – destroying ecosystems, threatening public health, and disrupting daily life in ways that can no longer be dismissed as isolated failures. The recent briefing to Parliament by the Auditor-General of South Africa (AGSA), drawing on the country’s first fully consolidated audit of the entire water value chain, lays bare a system in deep distress.

For the first time, audits of national departments, water boards, and 135 Water Services Authorities (WSAs) were consolidated to present a single, coherent picture. What emerged was not merely one of financial mismanagement, but of weakened governance, failing infrastructure, and escalating risks to human and environmental health – failures long warned about by experts.

Where the system is breaking

Breakdowns are evident across the entire water value chain. While there are glimmers of competence – national entities such as the Department of Water and Sanitation and the Trans-Caledon Tunnel Authority receiving unqualified audit opinions – the overall picture remains bleak.

The most severe failures occur at the municipal level, where water services ultimately succeed or fail. Only 23 of 135 WSAs achieved clean audits, nearly half were financially qualified, and several received adverse or disclaimed opinions. Particularly concerning is that a quarter of WSAs had no Water Services Development Plans at all, undermining any prospect of long-term, sustainable service delivery.

AGSA was clear: weak or absent planning compromises budgeting, maintenance, oversight, and accountability. The consequences are visible throughout the system. Infrastructure projects are, on average, delayed by nearly three years.

Municipalities spend just 3% of asset value on maintenance – far below the 8% benchmark – resulting in water losses estimated at almost R15 billion annually, increased reliance on emergency water tankering, and infrastructure operating well beyond its design life.

When governance failures become health emergencies

Water quality failures are perhaps the most alarming. Nearly half of drinking water systems do not meet basic microbiological safety standards, while almost all wastewater treatment plants fail at least one effluent requirement. Untreated or poorly treated sewage continues to enter rivers, groundwater, and coastal environments, with the Auditor-General warning of “near-catastrophic” environmental consequences. This is not a technical or regulatory issue alone – it is a direct public health risk.

Compounding these failures is entrenched financial misconduct and weak consequence management. AGSA identified more than R1.7 billion in material irregularities, including payments for work not done, environmental non-compliance, and failures to recover revenue. While recovery processes have begun in some cases, progress remains slow and uneven.

Parliament’s Portfolio Committee on Water and Sanitation described the findings as disgraceful, alarming, and unacceptable. Calls for stronger oversight, potential criminal liability for municipalities that pollute water resources, and even a commission of inquiry into municipal water failures were raised – measures that appear increasingly necessary.

A crisis that does not run out of warnings

Yet urgency alone will not resolve the crisis. South Africa’s water challenges are the result of systemic governance breakdowns: weak planning, inaccurate billing, neglected maintenance, fragmented accountability, and delayed or absent consequences. Communities are left to absorb the cost through unsafe water, failing services, and degraded, unsafe environments.

AGSA’s proposed path forward is clear and achievable, but sustained improvement will depend on political will, accountability, and coordinated action across the water sector itself and others. All hope is certainly not lost as South Africa has the skills, experience, and practical solutions required to address these challenges.

However, the continued lack of accountability and meaningful consequences cannot persist – particularly where service failures force communities to endure unsafe and/or polluted water or no water at all. South Africa’s scarce water resources can no longer be treated as dumping grounds and open sewers, at the expense of public health, dignity, and a safe environment.

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accountability Environment Municipal failure public health Water governance
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Professor Anja Du Plessis

    Water management expert and associate professor at the University of South Africa (Unisa).

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