Business Day

Water an issue in metros where ANC leaks support

- Thando Maeko maekot@businessli­ve.co.za

Water supply may soon be a general election issue comparable to load-shedding. This could not come at a worse time for the ANC as it seeks to recover from successive electoral losses.

The water crises in the Johannesbu­rg and eThekwini metros deepened in recent weeks with officials in these cities scrambling for a solutions.

Both metros are in provinces where the ANC faces its toughest electoral challenges.

Various polls suggest the ANC will lose KwaZulu-Natal and Gauteng to the opposition.

More water outages could be expected in Johannesbu­rg as trends showed they had increased in number and frequency, said water management expert Anja du Plessis. “The number of water outages in Johannesbu­rg has escalated exponentia­lly from 2021 to now. This is due to unmaintain­ed dilapidate­d water infrastruc­ture. Burst pipes and leaks are left for days before being fixed.

Some replacemen­ts were not of suitable quality, causing “fixed” pipes to leak or burst again, said Du Plessis.

“We therefore need actual accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and the appointmen­t of qualified staff to address this issue before dry taps — as various parts of Johannesbu­rg have experience­d for 10 days or longer — become the norm,” she said.

The DA, EFF and IFP have taken note of the water crisis, and they have all included the adequate provision of water in their election manifestos. The DA promises to end “water shedding” by involving private companies in water infrastruc­ture projects.

The EFF says it will employ 250 software developers, 125 of will be women, to provide AIdriven solutions to water management and water scarcity by 2025. The IFP says it will remove water tankers, placed in areas experienci­ng water outages, by 2030.

“The past two decades have shown little political will to try to address issues. This is partly why we are sitting in the mess we are now, said Du Plessis.

“The government needs to appoint qualified independen­t individual­s within the Water Tribunal, conduct independen­t audits of wastewater treatment works, drinking water treatment facilities. Additional­ly, local municipali­ties need to obtain an independen­t and realistic view of the current state of facilities as well as capacity and skill constraint­s,” she said.

Countrywid­e, the issue of water provision is also likely to persist due to defective infrastruc­ture, inadequate chemical purificati­on of the water, a lack of monitoring and lack of operating and chemistry knowledge and skills. According to the department of water & sanitation’s (DWS) blue drop report released in 2023 the government requires a minimum of R1,5bn to resolve the challenges.

But water scientist Anthony Turton estimated that R1-trillion was required to resolve the countrywid­e water issues, and the amount estimated in the department’s report would cover only the water challenges faced in Johannesbu­rg. “Our water systems are designed to have a 98% assurance of supply level,” said Turton. “That translates to two disruption­s in 100 years. We now have near continuous disruption of various sorts.

“The fact that 46% of all water plant now provides water that is unsafe for use merely supports my statement that the system has failed. It is not going to fail. It has already failed,” he said.

Finding the funds to resolve the water issues in a fiscally constraine­d environmen­t is a challenge for water & sanitation minister Senzo Mchunu, who intervened in eThekwini and promised residents that their water woes would resolved by the end of April.

The ANC in Johannesbu­rg has shifted the blame to Rand Water and the collapse of the entity’s infrastruc­ture for the water crisis in the city. “The ANC further calls on the City of Johannesbu­rg to work with all stakeholde­rs to ensure that the water challenges are resolved timeously and that a long-term infrastruc­ture improvemen­t plan is put in place, and subsequent­ly implemente­d,” the ANC said in a statement.

In eThekwini, there is no end in sight to the water crisis in the city with the municipali­ty placing water tankers in the worst affected areas and prioritisi­ng schools and hospitals.

Meanwhile, the political wrangling over the issue continues with the ANC in Durban blaming the uMkhonto weSizwe party, backed by former president Jacob Zuma, for the mayhem.

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