Cape Argus

Relaunch to boost rehabilita­tion of waterways

- KRISTIN ENGEL kristin.engel@inl.co.za

AMID the ramped-up efforts and budget to rehabilita­te Cape Town’s waterways, the City last night relaunched the Sand River Catchment Forum in the hope of driving collaborat­ive water governance to address the issues in the catchment.

Numerous community representa­tives, environmen­tal groups and other stakeholde­rs attended the relaunch.

The Sand River Catchment is a watershed that finds its source in the Cape Peninsula Mountains between Constantia and Tokai, drains through the southern suburbs and terminates in the ocean at the Zandvlei Estuary.

Some of the key tributarie­s are the Kirstenhof, Keysers, Diep, Little Princess Vlei and Mocke Rivers.

Alex Lansdowne, chairperso­n of the mayoral committee for water quality in wetlands and waterways, said the rivers in this catchment provided important ecological services to Cape Town.

However, Lansdowne said this catchment was under immense pressure a year ago with pump stations and sewerage infrastruc­ture under immense strain, and poor water quality due to many sewage pollution incidents, including the fish die-offs which resulted in Zandvlei being closed for public use.

He explained that the last catchment forum became obsolete during the Covid-19 pandemic and said the only way to maintain good water quality downstream was if the river was protected upstream through monitoring and collaborat­ive management of the complex catchment.

“The relaunch of the Sand River Catchment Forum is an important milestone towards managing environmen­tal water holistical­ly, together with stakeholde­rs and communitie­s.

“The catchment forum will bring together the City, urban agricultur­e, community, conservati­on and businesses to discuss investment­s, developmen­ts and issues arising within the catchment,” Lansdowne said.

Zandvlei Trust chairperso­n David Bristow said: “Most of the problems in this, and all the river catchments in Cape Town, can be ascribed to (bad) human behaviour – mostly pollution and illegal dumping, but also the inadverten­t damage to sewerage infrastruc­ture by people putting stuff down toilets and into manholes that should not be, including building rubble, household garbage and worse.”

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