Business Day

Water crisis

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As some residents of Johannesbu­rg embark on their 10th day without water, it is worth noting that the anticipate­d water crisis is no longer imminent but has arrived with all the privation that naturally follows. It joins the long and ignominiou­s list of prosperity-destroying catastroph­es we are enduring in energy, logistics and security.

But water is fundamenta­l. It is life, it is health and it is dignity. Without it, there is little to look forward to but filth, disease and misery. Long in the making after decades of infrastruc­ture neglect and a decade of outright looting under the Zuma administra­tion, it is a matter for the bookies to work out how long it will be until somebody establishe­s a water crisis committee in the presidency to join Necom, the crime and corruption workstream, and the national logistics crisis committee.

A water crisis in Gauteng is bad for everyone except property owners in the Western Cape. Contributi­ng 35% of the country’s GDP, the health of the province is a critical factor in our economy. While knowledge economy workers and some services companies bring skills, jobs and capital to the Mother City, the simplest solution to this appallingl­y wasteful allocation of resources is to fix the water infrastruc­ture in Gauteng.

That is easy to write, but as with all the crumbling edifices of the state, fixing what exists but is broken and then expanding it to accommodat­e our growing population and expanding cities is a quelling prospect for the most honest and well-resourced public servant.

Gauteng’s water woes are a danger to the people of its cities and the SA economy, and the crisis needs urgent attention.

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