The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium

The Grootfontein groundwater aquifer is important to the water supply of the town Mahikeng in the North West Province of South Africa and to commercial agriculture in the Province, but the water table has fallen by up to 28 m as a consequence of over-abstraction since the 1980s. Institutional and hy...

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Main Authors: Jude E. Cobbing, Maarten de Wit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academy of Science of South Africa 2018-05-01
Series:South African Journal of Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5170
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spelling doaj-88ed9d82a557484aaa046403a5f18e962020-11-24T23:21:05ZengAcademy of Science of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Science1996-74892018-05-011145/610.17159/sajs.2018/201702305170The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibriumJude E. Cobbing0Maarten de Wit1AEON/ESSRI, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, South AfricaAEON/ESSRI, Nelson Mandela University, Port Elizabeth, South AfricaThe Grootfontein groundwater aquifer is important to the water supply of the town Mahikeng in the North West Province of South Africa and to commercial agriculture in the Province, but the water table has fallen by up to 28 m as a consequence of over-abstraction since the 1980s. Institutional and hydrogeological issues impact the aquifer in complex ways, described here as a hydro-social system. Whilst the hydrogeology is well understood and South African laws provide for sustainable groundwater governance, poor stakeholder collaboration and other institutional problems mean that the overabstraction is likely to persist – an example of an undesirable Nash equilibrium. The Grootfontein aquifer case shows that groundwater underpins wider social-ecological-economic systems, and that more holistic management – taking the institutional context into account – is needed to underpin economic growth, employment and other public outcomes.  Significance: • The cost of better natural resource stewardship, including groundwater, is likely to be considerably less than the losses that occur when it is absent. • If local groundwater was better managed, it could make water supplies in Mahikeng cheaper and more reliable, which would in turn support local economic growth and employment.https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5170groundwatermanagementinstitutionstransdisciplinarityresilience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jude E. Cobbing
Maarten de Wit
spellingShingle Jude E. Cobbing
Maarten de Wit
The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
South African Journal of Science
groundwater
management
institutions
transdisciplinarity
resilience
author_facet Jude E. Cobbing
Maarten de Wit
author_sort Jude E. Cobbing
title The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
title_short The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
title_full The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
title_fullStr The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
title_full_unstemmed The Grootfontein aquifer: Governance of a hydro-social system at Nash equilibrium
title_sort grootfontein aquifer: governance of a hydro-social system at nash equilibrium
publisher Academy of Science of South Africa
series South African Journal of Science
issn 1996-7489
publishDate 2018-05-01
description The Grootfontein groundwater aquifer is important to the water supply of the town Mahikeng in the North West Province of South Africa and to commercial agriculture in the Province, but the water table has fallen by up to 28 m as a consequence of over-abstraction since the 1980s. Institutional and hydrogeological issues impact the aquifer in complex ways, described here as a hydro-social system. Whilst the hydrogeology is well understood and South African laws provide for sustainable groundwater governance, poor stakeholder collaboration and other institutional problems mean that the overabstraction is likely to persist – an example of an undesirable Nash equilibrium. The Grootfontein aquifer case shows that groundwater underpins wider social-ecological-economic systems, and that more holistic management – taking the institutional context into account – is needed to underpin economic growth, employment and other public outcomes.  Significance: • The cost of better natural resource stewardship, including groundwater, is likely to be considerably less than the losses that occur when it is absent. • If local groundwater was better managed, it could make water supplies in Mahikeng cheaper and more reliable, which would in turn support local economic growth and employment.
topic groundwater
management
institutions
transdisciplinarity
resilience
url https://www.sajs.co.za/article/view/5170
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