Cape Argus

Warning: this is not a drill!

City issues red alert to all consumers as water runs out

- Siyabonga Sesant siyabonga.sesant@inl.co.za

THE WATER crisis the City of Cape Town has been trying to avert has hit with full force, and the municipali­ty has sounded the alarm for consumers to limit their water use to drinking, bathing and cooking.

In what it called “a critical warning”, the mayoral committee today implored the city council to immediatel­y implement Level 4 water restrictio­ns, which would entail a ban on the use of all municipal water for outside and non-essential purposes.

The emergency comes as collective dam levels continue to drop – they are effectivel­y at just over 11% capacity this week.

The situation has become so serious that some dams are being dredged to scoop out mud, weeds and rubbish to prepare for low-level extraction of water.

“Rain or shine, we are now at a point where all consumers must use below 100 litres a day,” said mayco member for water services Xanthea Limberg.

The latest consumptio­n had jumped up again to 718 million litres, 118 million litres over the consumptio­n target of 600 million litres.

The measures suggested to reach this target include only flushing toilets when necessary, showering for less than two minutes a day or using a wet cloth for a “wipe-down”, and collecting all would-be wasted water and using it to fill up toilet cisterns, Limberg said.

“We are essentiall­y saying that you are only allowed to use a bit of water for drinking, cooking and washing,” she said.

“We are reaching a critical point in this drought crisis and although we continue to work non-stop to force consumptio­n down, overall use remains catastroph­ically high.

“This is not a request. We have seen huge water-saving efforts, but the unseasonab­ly hot autumn is exacerbati­ng the situation and we must all do more.”

The city said it was engaging with the Department of Water and Sanitation as a matter of urgency to request additional dredging operations at Theewaters­kloof Dam, which, of the six major dams, was the closest to depletion.

Limberg said pressure reduction programmes were continuing across the metro, which forcibly reduced supply at a given time.

“Other emergency interventi­ons are under way, and if required, the city will start to implement a lifeline supply of water across the metro,” she said.

Noordhoek resident Ron Zeeman, who has been studying rainfall patterns for more than three decades, said the average rainfall of around 800 to 900mm a year was expected to drop to around 700mm this winter.

Cosatu’s Tony Ehrenreich criticised the municipali­ty, saying “a plan that sees more than just the press statements on the reduction targets” was needed. “We need actual work and alternativ­es to be developed.”

 ?? PICTURE: WATER FROM AIR ?? NO MORE: A vastly depleted Theewaters­kloof Dam as seen earlier this month. It is Cape Town’s largest supplier of water.
PICTURE: WATER FROM AIR NO MORE: A vastly depleted Theewaters­kloof Dam as seen earlier this month. It is Cape Town’s largest supplier of water.
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