Cape Argus

Water restrictio­ns now raised to level 5

Residents restricted to 20kl/month as summer looms

- Marvin Charles

AS THE province moves into the spring and summer seasons with little prospects for rain, the City of Cape Town has announced tougher water restrictio­ns by raising the water consumptio­n alert to level 5.

The new restrictio­ns include a cap on individual domestic property usage and sets it at 20kl per month.

Residents who use more than this will be subjected to a very high fine. All users are also required to remain vigilant with regards to water use. The City said that further measures to reduce water pressure will commence immediatel­y.

The usage in this month will determine what actions delinquent users will be subject to thereafter. Where non-compliance occurs, users can be subject to an admission of guilt fine or, in accordance with Section 36(4) of the City’s Water By-law, the installati­on of a water management device (the cost of which will be billed to the account holder).

Installati­on of these devices in the households of the most excessive users commenced three weeks ago and will be ramped up in the coming weeks.

Further pressure reduction is likely to result in supply interrupti­ons being experience­d in higher-lying areas of the City’s supply zones for short periods during the day. Multi-storey buildings that do not make use of pumps and overhead tanks as required by the City’s building regulation­s are likely to experience supply problems.

Residents are encouraged to approach their body corporates or managing agents to ensure that these systems are in place and operationa­l.

Residents are advised to keep an emergency store of between 2-5 litres of water for drinking and basic hygiene at all times.

Managers of commercial properties are urged with immediate effect to ensure that their monthly consumptio­n of municipal supply water is reduced by 20% compared with a year ago. “Measures to drive down consumptio­n to 500 million litres of water per day are supplement­ed by other measures to augment the supply of water from non-surface water options by up to 500 million litres of water per day, which are currently under way. Together these actions form part of the approach to building water resilience over the short-to-medium term,” mayor Patricia de Lille said.

De Lille also noted the immense effort that many residents have taken to reduce their water consumptio­n.

“Since July 1, the City’s goal has been to reduce consumptio­n to 500 million litres

per day. As of last week, consumptio­n stood at 599 million litres per day. With the winter rainfall season likely to end in the next three to four weeks, we simply have to get used to using less water,” De Lille said.

The new water restrictio­ns however has not received a welcoming reception, “As Cosatu we have long said that their is a serious water crisis looming. The mayor and the premier have lied constantly to communitie­s regarding the water issue,” Cosatu’s Western Cape general secretary, Tony Ehrenreich, said. “The problem is that there are costs involved when implementi­ng these levels and new water restrictio­ns. And the problem is that the City’s projects that it wants to pursue will only come later into effect.” Experts have also voiced their concerns regarding the new level 5 water restrictio­ns, “This new water restrictio­n is long over due and I think we should’ve woken up much earlier,” Chief executive of South African company AIRWATER Ray de Vries said. Last week, the Cape Argus reported that the army will be called in to help dispense water and emergency purificati­on services in preparatio­n for day zero, probably in December.

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 ?? PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE ?? EVERY DROP COUNTS: Edmond Tiku giving water-savings tips at the City of Cape Town’s stand at the Homemakers Expo.
PICTURE: DAVID RITCHIE EVERY DROP COUNTS: Edmond Tiku giving water-savings tips at the City of Cape Town’s stand at the Homemakers Expo.

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