Responsible: Department of Water and Sanitation
Who backs this reform, who needs convincing, and which interests or red lines shape political feasibility.
Backers
29
4 stakeholders
Negotiation weight
9
1 conditional actors
Opposition weight
0
0 opposing actors
Review coverage
0/5
All mapped stance notes are still draft
Provenance warning
Every mapped stakeholder stance for this idea is still draft. The coalition score is directional only until at least the high-influence actors are reviewed.
Coalition Read
Anchor: Presidency / Operation Vulindlela. Highest-leverage swing actor: National Treasury.
Political Tractability
No reviewed signals · 0% of mapped influence has been reviewed.
Water security is a cross-cutting infrastructure priority — re: Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water)
Interest: Cross-cutting structural reform coordination across energy, logistics, water, digital infrastructure, and visa reform. Operation Vulindlela, establish…
Concern: Implementation bottlenecks within line departments; regulatory capture of NERSA and ICASA; SOE institutional inertia; ensuring quick wins translate in…
Engagement path: Already fully engaged. Seeks line department buy-in, NEDLAC social compact legitimacy, and international DFI financing alignment on key reform milesto…
Industrial water supply reliability affects manufacturing and mining operations — re: Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water)
Interest: Cross-sector structural reform across energy security, logistics efficiency, regulatory certainty, labour market flexibility, and digital infrastructu…
Concern: Slow implementation pace relative to policy announcements; inconsistency between reform rhetoric and regulatory decisions (e.g. NERSA tariff approvals…
Engagement path: Already actively engaged. Seeks implementation accountability mechanisms with published milestones, predictable regulatory timelines, and NEDLAC outco…
DPL and infrastructure lending frameworks support water sector reform — re: Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water)
Interest: Structural reform technical assistance and Development Policy Loan financing conditional on reform milestones; energy transition support through JETP…
Concern: Reform implementation pace lagging policy commitments, risking DPL disbursement conditions; governance and anti-corruption frameworks insufficient to…
Engagement path: Credible reform commitments with measurable, time-bound milestones; fiduciary standards and environmental/social safeguards; governance frameworks ens…
Agricultural sector critically dependent on water allocation and bulk infrastructure — re: Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water)
Interest: Water allocation security for irrigation agriculture; water user association governance and infrastructure investment; logistics access for agricultur…
Concern: National Water Act amendments and Water Resources Reconciliation Strategy that could redistribute existing water use licences without adequate compens…
Engagement path: Water rights security with transparent, rules-based reallocation mechanisms and compensation for involuntary reallocation; irrigation infrastructure m…
Supports infrastructure investment but requires credible cost-benefit and municipal co-funding — re: Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water)
Interest: Fiscal consolidation with public debt stabilising below 75% of GDP; structural reforms that improve revenue without expanding contingent liabilities;…
Concern: Unfunded mandates in energy transition (JETP co-financing); Eskom's R400bn+ debt and how restructuring socialises costs; reform proposals that create…
Engagement path: Reforms must be fiscally neutral or revenue-positive over the MTEF window; SOE restructuring must demonstrably reduce contingent liabilities; credible…
South Africa loses roughly 40% of treated water before it reaches consumers, according to the Department of Water and Sanitation's Blue Drop reports, costing municipalities an estimated R9.9 billion annually in lost revenue. The Portfolio Committee on Water and Sanitation has repeatedly examined non-revenue water during its Ministerial Support Programme reviews covering 105 critical municipalities. Despite ring-fenced grants for leak repair and meter installation, most municipalities lack the technical staff to sustain pressure management programmes. The Water Services Amendment Bill proposes strengthened regulatory oversight, but local capacity gaps remain the core obstacle.
Electricity Regulation Amendment Act — Competitive Electricity Market
Integrated Resource Plan (IRP) 2024 Update — Revised Electricity Mix
Energy Bounce-Back and Industrial Energy Self-Generation
National Transmission Company Capitalisation and Grid Expansion
Eskom Restructuring — Generation, Transmission, and Distribution Unbundling
How to cite
Wilse-Samson, L. (2026). Municipal Water Loss Reduction (Non-Revenue Water). SA Policy Space. NYU Wagner School of Public Policy. Retrieved 11 May 2026, from https://sa-policy-space.vercel.app/ideas/municipal-water-loss-reduction-non-revenue-water?snapshot=2026-05-11
Data as of 2026-05-11 · latest PMG meeting 2026-05-08
Freight Rail Third-Party Access and Transnet Separation