Water&Sanitation Africa July/August 2021

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CERTIFICATION

Blue Drop and Green Drop cer tification programme revitalised In a bid to achieve excellence in drinking water and wastewater quality management, the Department of Water and Sanitation is set to conduct a full 2021 Green Drop audit and Blue Drop progress assessment. By Kirsten Kelly

THE FIVE STEPS TO GREEN DROP CERTIFICATION: apacity Management: process 1 Ccontrol, maintenance, technical/

2 3 4 5

T

his is one of the most important days in the Department of Water and Sanitation’s (DWS’s) 2021 calendar year,” said Sputnik Ratau, the DWS’s acting chief director for communications at the Green Drop and Blue Drop certification programme

webinar, where its revitalisation was announced. Mentioned in President Ramaphosa’s State of the Nation Address and part of the National Water and Sanitation Master Plan to establish water security for the next 50 years, the Blue Drop and Green Drop certification programme

TABLE 1 Key programme dates

Key events

Green Drop audit

Blue Drop PAT

Regional symposiums

July 2021

July 2021

Distribute Blue Drop PAT

End of July 2021

WSIs to upload portfolio of evidence (POE)

Mid-August 2021

Start audits and site visits

August 2021

Moderation

August 2021

Completion of Blue Drop PATs

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October 2021

Confirmation virtual audit

Mid-November 2021

Final moderation

December 2021

December 2021

Release ready report

March 2022

March 2022

JUL /AUG 2021

engineering and scientific Environmental Management: wastewater risk abatement, effluent quality monitoring, sludge management, laborator y credibility Financial Management: wastewater operations cost determination, energy demand, operations and maintenance budget and expenditure, supply chain management Technical Management: WWTW design capacity, process/audit condition assessment, sewer main inspection, asset register, local regulation Quality Compliance: monitoring information, authorisation, effluent compliance sludge classification

will protect the health and well-being of people and the environment, and improve water services and resources through regulation.

Incentive-based regulation

Leonardo Manus, chief director: Regulation, Compliance and Enforcement at the DWS, said that the certification programmes are part of incentive-based regulation. “This type of regulation is all about the people who take responsibility for wastewater management. It is not a weaker form of regulation. It does not mean that the certification programme is voluntary. The National Water Act (No. 36 of 1998) states that the DWS has a right to information that assists it in its duties – meaning that if the DWS asks for information and it is not forthcoming, that is an offence.” Manus went on to say that the certification programme aims to create


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