The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zinwa needs $500m to boost water supplies

- Elita Chikwati Senior Reporter

THE Zimbabwe National Water Authority (Zinwa) requires $500 million to rehabilita­te water infrastruc­ture countrywid­e.

Zinwa corporate communicat­ions manager Mrs Marjorie Munyonga told the Parliament­ary Portifolio Committee on Environmen­t, Water, Tourism and Hospitalit­y during a tour of the Zimunya Water Station that the money would ensure consumers receiving water from Zinwa’s 534 stations countrywid­e have water on their doorsteps.

The money would be used for the rehabilita­tion and upgrading of water purificati­on plants, reticulati­on system and pumping facilities. In addition, the money will also enable the establishm­ent of the irrigation master plan and institutio­nal strengthen­ing for Zinwa and local authoritie­s where the projects are running.

She said Zinwa was not getting an allocation from Treasury for the purposes of rehabilita­tion and the situation was made worse by the non-payment of water bills by consumers.

She said only 40 percent of the consumers were paying bills and this was impacting negatively on the authority’s capacity to maintain infrastruc­ture.

“It is not sustainabl­e for Treasury to fund the rehabilita­tion and maintananc­e of the infrastruc­ture. The best way is for consumers to pay their bills.

“At the moment we are operating below capacity because of non-payment of bills,” she said.

Zinwa operations engineer for Save Catchment, Eng Passwell Nyahora, said the authority had received a grant of $20 million from the World Bank which was going to be used for rehabilita­tion of water stations.

The first phase will see the rehabilita­tion of Zimunya and Lupane water stations while the second phase will include Guruve, Madziva, Mataga and Nembudziya water stations.

“We have so far received $10 million and work has already started at Zimunya and Lupane. Progress at Zimunya is at 6 percent and we expect the project to be completed by May 2018.

“The station currently runs using one single pump and if it breaks down there will be a huge problem.

“Through the rehabilita­tion project, the Zimunya station will have an extension of 200 percent and we are going to have 270 water connection­s with meters. The Zimunya project costs $1,8 million,” he said.

Zimunya water station supplies water to more than 6 500 people in the area.

Zinwa engineer Tendai Muyambo said Zimunya residents owed the authority $324 000 from unpaid water bills. We bill $12 000 a month and get around $4 000 from consumers.

“We bill directly to residents and at 40 cents per cubic metre for the first 10 cubic metres and 70 cents per cubic metre for the rest of the water.

“Seventy-five percent of the households are metered while we rely on estimates for those without meters. Customers should provide their own meters or replace non-functional water meters,” she said.

The committee will also tour Middle Sabi Irrigation Scheme, Checheche water supply, Tokwe Mukosi, Lake Mutirikwi, Mtshabezi Pipeline and Dam, Ncema Dam and treatment works, Gwayi Shangani dam project, Nyamandlov­u Aquifer forest project and Kunzvi Dam sites among others.

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