Rural Namibian water management gives regional lessons

Gaborone Dam ran dry from 2015 to 2016, the first time in its history
Gaborone Dam ran dry from 2015 to 2016, the first time in its history

In near-desert Southern Africa, access to water in rural areas is already precarious. Climate change will reduce overall rainfall, decreasing the quality and quantity of water resources. In Namibia, the national government has rolled out a wide network of water infrastructure, bringing piped water to many remote villages. They have handed the management of the daily water distribution, and payments for that water, to local village volunteers. While the policy is hard to implement, the better this country handles the processes of decentralised water management now, the better it will be able to adapt to the impacts of climate change in future. LEONIE JOUBERT* writes

Every morning, Maria Petrus* (*name has been changed) needs to be at the communal water tap in her village in Onesi Constituency, close to the northern Namibian border with Angola.

She will unlock the faucet for about two hours while her fellow villagers come along with 25 litre cans, to collect their day’s water. Later that afternoon, Petrus will be back at the tap for another couple of hours, overseeing more water collection.

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