
Harare – As Zimbabwe intensifies efforts to secure sustainable economic growth and environmental resilience, the upcoming National Water Summit 2026 is emerging as a strategic platform aimed at repositioning water from a persistent vulnerability into a catalyst for national development.
The summit, scheduled for 25 March at the Harare Hippodrome, was formally announced during a press briefing by Cleopatra Ngwenya Dube, the Chief Executive Officer of EcoVision. The initiative has drawn a broad coalition of partners including the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Development, as well as international collaborators such as African Rivers, The OVO and 149 Technologies Pte Ltd.

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Book NowBeyond being a conventional conference, the summit represents a deliberate shift in the national dialogue from diagnosing water challenges toward implementing integrated solutions capable of strengthening Zimbabwe’s economic ecosystem.
Water remains one of the most critical yet increasingly strained resources in Zimbabwe. Agriculture, mining, manufacturing, urban development and public health all depend on stable and clean water systems. However, in recent years, pollution from mining activities, industrial discharge and untreated sewage has exposed the fragility of water governance systems, creating ripple effects across the economy.
The contamination of Lake Chivero illustrates the magnitude of the challenge. The reservoir, which supplies water to the City of Harare, has long suffered from pollution that forces the city to spend substantial resources on purification processes. These escalating treatment costs ultimately translate into economic strain for both municipal authorities and residents, while also highlighting the broader national implications of water mismanagement.
Against this backdrop, the summit’s theme, “Water Pollution: Empowering the Economy through a Sustainable Water Resource Network,” reflects an understanding that water governance is inseparable from economic stability and industrial development.
Analytically, the initiative aligns closely with Zimbabwe’s broader development trajectory. Under National Development Strategy 1, the country has prioritised resilient infrastructure, agricultural modernisation and environmental sustainability as pillars for economic transformation. Water management sits at the centre of these ambitions, as no sector can scale productivity without reliable water systems.
The summit also resonates with the continental aspirations outlined in Agenda 2063 under the leadership of the African Union, which identifies sustainable water and sanitation infrastructure as fundamental to industrialisation, climate resilience and inclusive development across Africa.
What makes the summit particularly significant is its multi-sectoral approach. Organisers have indicated that senior government officials, environmental experts, private sector leaders, financiers and community stakeholders will participate in shaping actionable frameworks.
Three strategic pillars are expected to dominate discussions.
First, strengthening policy enforcement and regulatory frameworks, particularly within sectors such as mining and industry where pollution risks are high. This reflects a growing recognition that environmental compliance must evolve alongside Zimbabwe’s expanding resource extraction and industrial activities.
Second, mobilising investment into water infrastructure and pollution mitigation technologies. The summit intends to showcase bankable projects capable of attracting both domestic and international capital, signalling a shift toward treating water management as an investment opportunity rather than solely a public service obligation.
Third, empowering communities and local institutions. Rural communities, farmers and local authorities often sit at the frontline of water resource management, yet they remain under-resourced. By equipping them with monitoring tools, knowledge and advocacy platforms, the initiative seeks to strengthen grassroots stewardship of water ecosystems.
From a policy perspective, the summit’s ambition to establish a Safe Water Resource Network suggests the emergence of a coordinated national framework capable of bridging government regulation, private sector innovation and community participation.
For Zimbabwe, the stakes are significant. Water security directly influences food production, mining output, public health systems and investor confidence. In an era defined by climate variability and rapid urbanisation, failure to protect water resources could constrain economic progress. Conversely, effective management could unlock productivity across multiple sectors.
As articulated by EcoVision’s leadership, the ultimate vision is to transform water from a national challenge into a driver of economic opportunity.
If successfully implemented, the National Water Summit may therefore mark more than a policy dialogue. It could represent the beginning of a structural shift in how Zimbabwe integrates environmental sustainability with economic transformation—turning water security into a cornerstone of the country’s journey toward long-term development and resilience.

