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EU grant supports the transboundary water management

Okavango River at Shakawe PIC. THALEFANG CHARLES
 
Okavango River at Shakawe PIC. THALEFANG CHARLES

Addressing the gathering today, the EU Ambassador to Botswana and SADC Alexander Baum said the Cubango-Okavango river system, rising in Angola and flowing through Namibia to the Okavango Delta in Botswana was one of the world’s few remaining naturally clean water resources.

He explained that the river’s presence in the dry sands of the Kalahari was highly valued by the three countries, which established the Permanent Okavango River Basin Water Commission (OKACOM) in 1994 to advise the member states on how best to share and manage that unique resource.

“The three riparian countries have different but legitimate perspectives of the same river system while Angola, where most of the water originates, benefits from the most reliable and highest rainfalls, Namibia and Botswana are two of the driest countries of Southern Africa; which makes water resources available in this region highly valuable,” he said.

He added that Botswana was the final recipient of the water and therefore abundance of water, the timing of the flow and nutrients gives the Okavango Delta its highly biodiverse habitats and wildlife, making it a worldwide tourist destination considered by many one of the most beautiful regions in the world. 

Baum also pointed out that future development plans especially in the agricultural sector could have a negative impact on the quantity and quality of the waters in the basin, thus strongly affecting the future environment and other associated uses such as tourism and overall status of the ecosystem and services.

“This can be avoided through proper management of the resources in a collaborative and joint manner. In order to help the three countries achieve this ideal, the EU is funding a programme in excess of EUR 6million to enable the OKACOM to acquire the tools and the capacity to collect and manage data related to surface and ground water resources, water quality and sedimentation,” he said.

He explained that the EUR 1.65 million grant signed today between the EU and the OKACOM was part of that EUR 6 million programme. The grant is said to be used for three and halve years.

For his part, the permanent secretary for the Ministry of Land Management, Water and Sanitation Services of Botswana Thatayaone Dedede said he was expressed his immense excitement over the occasion saying that their ambitions as riparian states was to use those resources to better livelihoods of their countries, address social challenges and economic needs for their people.

“The impacts inflicted on the river’s health, environment and the entire ecosystem remain at the core of the efforts that we, the riparian countries have invested and continue to explore, to ensure that the management and exploitation of the basin is safe and presents opportunities for national development and economic growth,” he said.

He said the EU’s provision of financial support to their countries in reference to data collection and water resource management will help streamline efforts to manage quality information that will add value on the conservation, allocation and sustainable utilization of the basin resources. 

Dedede added that it would also support their efforts in developing effective measures that cerate prospects to redress poverty, boost the tourism service sector and create employment opportunities for their communities.