Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought

The gaining prominence of resilience in urban policy has meant that urban decision makers are increasingly being asked to exhibit foresight and preparedness in how the urban system is planned and managed. The City of Cape Town has accepted this principle of resilience as a key means of driving colle...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Cooke, Kayleen
Other Authors: Cirolia, Liza
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31167
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-311672020-12-10T05:11:13Z Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought Cooke, Kayleen Cirolia, Liza civil engineering The gaining prominence of resilience in urban policy has meant that urban decision makers are increasingly being asked to exhibit foresight and preparedness in how the urban system is planned and managed. The City of Cape Town has accepted this principle of resilience as a key means of driving collective understanding and action within the urban system in a time of growing uncertainty. Cape Town recently experienced the worst natural disaster in the history of its city-dom, in the form of a three-year drought. The impact of this drought on the municipal budget has been formidable. In terms of expenditure, considerable adjustments to the planned expenditure had to be made in order to source the funds required for large-scale infrastructure projects designed to increase resilience within the municipal water supply. In terms of revenue, there is significant concern around the fiscal sustainability of the municipality as more and more households are developing their own water supply in the form of rainwater tanks and boreholes, which is anticipated to decrease the municipal revenue gained from water tariffs dramatically (CCT, 2018f). The story of how the municipal budget system was affected by and reacted to the drought provides an opportunity to observe the application of the City’s understanding of resilience to a complex system, where many actors undertake simultaneous and independent activities, and the impact of these activities is evident at multiple levels and across multiple systems and sub-systems. 2020-02-19T12:04:32Z 2020-02-19T12:04:32Z 2019 2020-02-19T08:50:51Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31167 eng application/pdf Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Civil Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic civil engineering
spellingShingle civil engineering
Cooke, Kayleen
Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
description The gaining prominence of resilience in urban policy has meant that urban decision makers are increasingly being asked to exhibit foresight and preparedness in how the urban system is planned and managed. The City of Cape Town has accepted this principle of resilience as a key means of driving collective understanding and action within the urban system in a time of growing uncertainty. Cape Town recently experienced the worst natural disaster in the history of its city-dom, in the form of a three-year drought. The impact of this drought on the municipal budget has been formidable. In terms of expenditure, considerable adjustments to the planned expenditure had to be made in order to source the funds required for large-scale infrastructure projects designed to increase resilience within the municipal water supply. In terms of revenue, there is significant concern around the fiscal sustainability of the municipality as more and more households are developing their own water supply in the form of rainwater tanks and boreholes, which is anticipated to decrease the municipal revenue gained from water tariffs dramatically (CCT, 2018f). The story of how the municipal budget system was affected by and reacted to the drought provides an opportunity to observe the application of the City’s understanding of resilience to a complex system, where many actors undertake simultaneous and independent activities, and the impact of these activities is evident at multiple levels and across multiple systems and sub-systems.
author2 Cirolia, Liza
author_facet Cirolia, Liza
Cooke, Kayleen
author Cooke, Kayleen
author_sort Cooke, Kayleen
title Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
title_short Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
title_full Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
title_fullStr Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
title_full_unstemmed Questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the Cape Town drought
title_sort questions of resilience in municipal finance response to a shock event: a case study of the cape town drought
publisher Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31167
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