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Sustainable Water Utilisation in African Breweries

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Title: Sustainable Water Utilisation in African Breweries


1
Sustainable Water Utilisation in African Breweries
  • - current practices and prospects -

2
Contents
  • Introduction and study background
  • Summary of findings
  • Conclusions
  • Recommendations

3
Study background
  • African BREwery sector Water savings initiative
    (ABREW) aimed at assessing the current status
    and opportunities for reducing water and
    wastewater generation in African brewery sector
    through cleaner production approach
  • Sector study and framework analysis of water
    consumption in African breweries
  • Focus on the situation in Ethiopia, Ghana,
    Morocco and Uganda

4
Water situation in Africa
  • Access to freshwater is key condition for
    development
  • Africa has abundant water resources, but
    distribution and availability varies widely
  • Water policies and conservation efforts focus on
    supply-side for domestic and agricultural use
  • No focus on industrial needs, in particular water
    intensive industries

5
The brewery sector
  • Brewing is intrinsically water intensive industry
  • Best practice technology requires approx. 4l of
    raw water for every litre of beer (specific water
    consumption)
  • Water use can easily triple with old technology
  • High water consumption also means higher energy
    use and more wastewater

6
The African brewery sector
  • Widespread industry
  • Majority profitable significant contributors to
    national economies
  • 15 breweries in Ethiopia, Ghana, Morocco and
    Uganda employ 6 000 workers
  • Annual beer production 5.2 million hl
  • Mostly privately owned, often by multinational
    parent companies

7
Water use in breweries
8
Water associated problems
  • Breweries in Ghana, Morocco and Uganda compete
    for water with other industrial and domestic
    users
  • In Ethiopia breweries contend with irrigation for
    crop farming
  • Often minimal wastewater treatment, affecting
    receiving water bodies and threatening water
    supplies of other users
  • Acute shortage of fresh water in urban centres
    and dependence of nearby rural communities on
    rivers is already source of conflict and dispute

9
Awareness on water use
  • Generally low awareness of water issues
    (availability, supply, quality and pollution)
  • Systematic water management is lacking
  • Water awareness varies greatly among
    decision-makers, government officials and brewery
    staff, depending on training and exposure

10
Public instruments used to influence water use
  • Applied in varying degree in all study countries,
    however
  • only limited enforcement of legislation
  • lack of capacity in government to monitor trends
  • Current water and effluent charges not sufficient
    to encourage water conservation and pollution
    prevention
  • As a result, national legislative and regulatory
    frameworks so far failed as key drivers for
    brewing industry to reduce water consumption or
    release of pollutants

11
Economics of water saving
  • Abstraction fees and effluent release charges are
    no major cost factors to have significant
    influence on rate of water extraction and
    discharge
  • Indirect costs associated with water use are
    rarely accounted for, though often much higher

12
Corporate management aspects
  • EMS and external compliance with regulatory
    standards are parallel exercises in most African
    countries
  • Adoption of formal EMS (e.g. ISO 14 000)
    increasing largely driven by market interest
  • EMS often seen as benchmarking exercise for
    public relation purposes rather than tool for
    improving environmental performance and
    sustainability

13
Possibilities for Cleaner Production (CP) in
African breweries
  • High specific water consumption clearly indicates
    some good opportunities for CP
  • Combination of government, corporate and public
    pressure works well
  • Results of detailed CP assessment in Uganda

14
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15
Problems and hindrances for better water
management in African brewery sector
  • General constraints associated with attitudes and
    institutional practice
  • Study identified key constraint factors
    associated with Government and brewery industry

16
Government/policy constraints
  • Existing water policies focus on water supply for
    domestic and agricultural use
  • Policy instruments, e.g. water abstraction
    permits and licences, not applied effectively
  • Limited information on national water use
    comparing industrial with agricultural/ domestic
    use

17
Brewery industry constraints
  • Insufficient water monitoring at plant level
  • Environmental control seen as issue of wastewater
    treatment, not improving production efficiency
  • Limited understanding of CP approach
  • Management focuses on expanding output, not
    reducing production costs
  • Management unaware of concomitant costs
    associated with high water use, e.g. energy
    costs, higher chemicals use, costs of pumping and
    treatment

18
Drivers for breweries to pursue improved water
management
  • Environmental regulation and enforcement of
    effective legislation
  • Introduction of optimal pricing for water
    extraction and discharge
  • Awareness raising and compliance assistance by
    NCPC and water management authorities
  • Corporate environmental policies of multinational
    parent companies
  • International environmental management and
    reporting requirements

19
Recommendations
  • Increase awareness raising in all stakeholder
    groups (companies, government, public) on
    national importance of improved water management
    in breweries
  • Improved information on water allocation, water
    use and discharge to allow for effective
    application of government policy
  • Promote CP as process enhancement tool

20
Recommendations
  • Government to make better use of financial
    instruments, e.g. water abstraction and discharge
    fees
  • Include water management targets explicitly into
    EMS tools
  • Develop comprehensive follow-up programme to
    ensure more focussed and prolonged CP outreach to
    brewery sector and promote public-private
    partnership on water utilisation in African
    breweries

21
Acknowledgements
  • Thank you to
  • African Roundtable on Sustainable Consumption and
    Production (ARSCP)
  • Pollution Research Group of Kwazulu Natal
  • Uganda Water Resource Management Department
    (WRMD)
  • Danbrew
  • Study prepared by African Roundtable on
    Sustainable Consumption and Production (ARSCP)
    through the National Cleaner Production Centres
    (NCPCs) in Ethiopia, Ghana, Morocco and Uganda
  • Danida provided financial support to undertake
    study
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