The Borneo Post

Senegal’s water-stressed capital faces difficult future

- Laurent Lozano

DAKAR, Senegal: Many residents of the Senegalese metropolis Dakar get up in the middle of the night hoping to collect water from their taps, which mostly run dry.

“We wake up at 4 or 5am to get water,” says Sidy Fall, 44, in his kitchen in a working-class neighbourh­ood, filled with large bottles of stored water. If he doesn’t get up in time, the water often runs out by 5.30am. Fall’s taps are sometimes dry for two or three days at a time.

A population boom in Senegal is intensifyi­ng pressure on scarce water resources in its semi-arid capital of five million people, with problems set to increase over the coming decades.

This is common to many African cities, where infrastruc­ture investment­s have lagged behind strong demographi­cs and demand for water from industry and agricultur­e.

In Dakar, a recent World Bank report pointed to poor water management as part of the reason for shortages, along with overexploi­tation and groundwate­r pollution.

But demand for water has kept increasing too, sending municipal officials racing to improve infrastruc­ture to secure supply.

“Water is a source of life, but here water is a source of problems,” said Khadija Mahecor Diouf, the mayor of the Dakar suburb Golf Sud, at a public meeting last week.

Population explosion

Golf Sud’s population has risen from 70,000 to 125,000 people in 10 years, Diouf told AFP, and is predicted to double in the next decade. Half of all households in the suburb have problems with water, she said.

“We have a population that has exploded, urban planning schemes that have not been respected,” Diouf added, predicting that the problem would get worse.

About a third of Senegal’s population of 17 million people lives in the Dakar region, which is also the country’s economic nerve centre.

But there are myriad complicati­ons tied to the runaway expansion. The sewage system is often lacking, and parts of Dakar routinely flood during the rainy season.

Diouf said water cuts are a problem ‘all year round’. Senegal’s government, for its part, said 99 per cent of urbanites and 91 per cent of rural dwellers had access to water.

Supply remedies

The authoritie­s are pushing to remedy supply issues in the capital and the government

says it has made considerab­le infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Babou Ngom, from the state water company Sones, said new investment­s meant that supply would soon match demand.

Dakar is supplied by four plants that pump water from a lake some 250 kilometres north of the city – as well as from overexploi­ted aquifers.

The fourth plant came online last year: Ngom said it would produce 200,000 cubic metres per day by the end of 2022 – which would guarantee Dakar’s water supply until 2026.

Sones is also building a desalinati­on plant on the Dakar coastline, due to open in 2024. While Dakar residents are quick to blame the government, national consumer associatio­n president Momar Ndao concedes there have been improvemen­ts.

Often water is only available on ground floors, however, and consumers are increasing­ly complainin­g about exorbitant prices, he added.

More water

Sen’eau, a private firm that has managed Dakar’s water on behalf of the state since 2020, argues it is not to blame for recurrent shortages.

The firm – in which French

utility company Suez has a 45per cent stake – is the target of broad popular frustratio­n. But Diery Ba, a Sen’eau director, said the company had inherited crumbling water infrastruc­ture, which it has set about improving.

“Almost no neighbourh­ood had water 24 hours a day,” he said.

While upgrades to the network had led to water cuts, this ‘adjustment period’ was coming to an end, he added.

Higher bills were also a result of consumers simply consuming more water than they once did, he said.

Despite improvemen­ts, a question mark still hangs over Dakar’s future water supply.

According to the World Bank, Senegalese water consumptio­n is due to increase between 30 and 60 per cent by 2035. The country ‘urgently needs to prioritise water security,’ the bank said.

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 ?? — AFP photos ?? Workers from the KMS3 water plant walk on the bridge of the raw water intake of the Guiers Lake, the main source of water supply for the Senegalese capital Dakar.
— AFP photos Workers from the KMS3 water plant walk on the bridge of the raw water intake of the Guiers Lake, the main source of water supply for the Senegalese capital Dakar.
 ?? ?? Senegalese people pump water from a well using a makeshift pump at a public point at the roundabout in Colobane, a neighbourh­ood of Dakar.
Senegalese people pump water from a well using a makeshift pump at a public point at the roundabout in Colobane, a neighbourh­ood of Dakar.
 ?? ?? Senegalese women fill water bottles from a tanker truck during a public distributi­on in Dakar.
Senegalese women fill water bottles from a tanker truck during a public distributi­on in Dakar.
 ?? ?? A container is filled with water at a public fountain in Niarry Tally, a neighborho­od of Dakar.
A container is filled with water at a public fountain in Niarry Tally, a neighborho­od of Dakar.

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