The Herald (South Africa)

Day Zero: film industry helps

- Dave Chambers

WHEN British actress Kate Beckinsale agreed to take the starring role in a TV drama being shot in Cape Town‚ she probably did not imagine weeks of eating off paper plates with plastic cutlery.

But that is what she is doing as the city’s R5-billion-a-year film industry joins the campaign to stave off Day Zero.

Beckinsale‚ 44‚ is the star of The Widow‚ an eight-part series commission­ed by Amazon Prime and the British firm ITV.

She plays Georgia Wells‚ who tries to uncover the truth behind her husband’s disappeara­nce after he is reported dead in a Democratic Republic of the Congo plane crash.

Cape Town is standing in for Kinshasa in the series‚ but a key difference between the two cities has become all too apparent to cast and crew – the Congo River.

Without the world’s second-largest river – or any bountiful source of water – Cape Town is determined to sustain its film economy without worsening the water crisis.

Mayoral committee member J P Smith said: “The city has introduced additional criteria for our events and film permit applicatio­ns.

“Each organiser [must] state upfront plans to use alternate water sources or minimise use of the city’s potable water.

“I can confidentl­y say that event organisers and the film industry have risen to the challenge and are pulling out all the stops to save our potable water.

“It is important to get this balance right: ensuring the sustainabl­e supply of water and balancing this against supporting our economy and creating employment.

“Nothing would worsen the water crisis more than reducing employment opportunit­ies and the job losses this will entail.”

Examples of how the film industry had responded to the call to “save like a local” included:

ý Table cloths have been replaced with reusable plastic table covers that can be wiped clean.

This had reduced water use from 10 litres to 50ml per table cloth‚ translatin­g into savings of 500 litres a day.

ý Biodegrada­ble and disposable crockery and cutlery have replaced non-disposable items, cutting water consumptio­n for washing dishes to about 250 litres a day from 1 500 litres.

ý Vegetables are steamed instead of boiled‚ and cooking water is being reused to clean kitchens and toilets.

ý Kitchens are using sanitisers for hand-washing‚ and grey water from frozen goods is being used to clean floors. – TimesLIVE

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