Business Day

Cape Town bucks trend

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If you’re looking for a one-stop explanatio­n for why SA’s economy, and government services, underperfo­rm so badly, look no further than the latest report by the SA Institutio­n of Civil Engineerin­g (“Infrastruc­ture in a sorry state”, November 14.)

The report paints a dire picture of chronic underinves­tment in infrastruc­ture in SA, giving us an overall “D” grade — a pass, but barely. It means not enough is being built to cope with growing demand, and that which has already been built is poorly maintained. Without urgent action basic infrastruc­ture will deteriorat­e to the point where services collapse, logistics cripple the economy, and South Africans face possible danger.

In Cape Town, we are determined that this will not happen. We have spent great effort this year growing our infrastruc­ture investment pipeline and ensuring we have enough engineers and project managers to deliver these projects on time. We are focusing our investment­s where it counts: infrastruc­ture that improves lives for residents, especially in poor communitie­s, and that helps grow the economy. Water and sewage projects will thus soak up half the nearly R30bn we plan to spend on infrastruc­ture over the next three years. This will deliver meaningful dignity to people living in poverty, and will support the further rapid growth of our city.

We are working to ensure our infrastruc­ture is world-class, fit for the future and resilient. We will achieve this through adequate spending commitment­s, a pipeline of opportunit­ies for financing, policy certainty, and precise data on the state, quality, and performanc­e of existing infrastruc­ture.

This way we can hopefully turn around the SA Institutio­n of Civil Engineerin­g report in years ahead and provide a blueprint for how SA’s cities can invest to protect their residents for the future.

Geordin Hill-Lewis Cape Town mayor

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