Abstract:
Understanding the historical context of sanitation provision and wastewater disposal is essential
to understanding its regulation. The aim of this article was to provide that context for South
Africa, interweaving the story with social, institutional, policy and technological developments
over more than two centuries. Given that so much was initially developed in Europe or
encountered in Europe, it was subsequently adapted for use in South Africa. The article begins
in earnest with the population disruptions which accompanied the Industrial Revolution,
drawing parallels between the scale of these disruptions and the 20th- and 21st-century mass
urbanisation in the developing world. Thereafter the article dealt exclusively with South Africa,
highlighting the major reversal of policy in the mid-20th century, prior to which time wastewater
could not be discharged to watercourses, whereafter treated wastewater could only be discharged
to watercourses. The article then spelt out some key current regulations, especially with respect
to the skills required, and some difficulties in applying the regulations.