Kumba Iron Ore Advances Water Sustainability With Innovative Reuse And Community Supply Projects
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Hamilton Moswathupa, Kumba Iron Ore specialist hydrogeologist at the Sishen mine's eastern storm water management dam. Image supplied.
Up to 80% of water used across Kumba's mines is recovered through advanced technologies, thousands of rural residents have reliable, clean water, and local municipalities can plan and manage their systems independently.
Shared resource
Around the Kolomela mine specifically, water solutions have been developed in partnership with local municipalities to address the particular challenges of the local catchment.
The operation also contributes to the regional water supply scheme by diverting surplus water volumes and treating and reusing effluent from the Gamagara Municipality wastewater works for plant operations – turning a municipal challenge into a shared resource.
In the Joe Morolong Municipality, Sishen mine completed a major upgrade to the bulk water scheme serving the villages of Sesipi, Perth, Kome, and Tsiloane.
The R11m project refurbished nine boreholes, installed two booster pumps, and delivers an average of 480 kilolitres of clean water every day to more than 6,000 residents.
The mine makes its engineering choices with sustainability in mind. Nine of the boreholes are primarily solar-powered, with Eskom connections retained as backup.
Construction followed the Department of Water and Sanitation's design criteria for rural community water supply, embedding the project within the national regulatory framework from the outset.
This is infrastructure designed not just for today, but for the life of the communities it serves. "The hydrology of this region demands precision, discipline and long-term thinking," says Hamilton Moswathupa, specialist in Hydrogeology and water management at Kumba.
"Our efforts within the operations and host region are always guided by and in line with our vision to support safe, compliant and adaptive mining underpinned by operational excellence and collaborative initiatives that drive water stewardship."
"Our water recovery rates reflect rigorous science and continuous improvement – directly reducing pressure on the shared water sources that communities and ecosystems both depend on."
Improving municipal capability
While companies can build physical infrastructure in months, the institutional capacity to maintain, manage and improve it takes years.
This is the gap that Anglo American's Municipal Capability and Partnership Programme (MCPP) was designed to close.
Operating in the Tsantsabane and Gamagara local municipalities – the two municipalities where Kumba's mines are located – the MCPP partners with the Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs and the CSIR to build genuine municipal capability.
In Tsantsabane, Blue Drop water quality compliance scores rose from 0% to 56% for the Postmasburg scheme and in Gamagara from 11% to 54.71% across all its schemes.
Municipal teams that once depended entirely on external contractors to maintain boreholes are now doing so themselves, guided by groundwater management plans and standard operating procedures they developed in-house.
Investing in water infrastructure
The programme's alignment with the Cape Town Declaration on Africa water investments places it squarely within the continent's emerging consensus on what water resilience requires: not just infrastructure, but the enabling environments and governance systems that allow infrastructure to function over time.
"You can't separate a mine from its catchment," says Musa Jack, MCPP programme manager at Anglo American.
"We share the same water, the same risks, the same consequences.
"Our sustainability approach is to protect, preserve and restore our water catchments to support resilient operations, communities and the environment.
"The MCPP exists because we take that seriously and partner with local stakeholders to address challenges."
Advanced recovery technology reduces industrial demand. Infrastructure investment extends supply to underserved communities. Governance programmes ensure they're sustained beyond the life of any individual project or mine.
Together, these three pillars align with South Africa's National Water and Sanitation Master Plan, which identifies mining regions as critical pressure points in the national water system – and which calls for exactly this kind of integrated, partnership-based response.
"The measure of this work isn't what happens while we're here. It's what happens after we leave," says Jack. "It's part of Anglo American's longstanding commitment to responsible mining as an enabler for sustainable development of our communities and the country."
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