Daily Maverick

Despite evidence, Joburg mayor insists water crisis doesn’t exist

Responding through his spokespers­on, Kabelo Gwamanda says the recent widespread water outages were isolated incidents and, instead of worrying, residents should reduce their water usage. By

- Ferial Haffajee

Daily Maverick asked Johannesbu­rg mayor Kabelo Gwamanda about the crisis affecting 50% of the city’s water supply area. His spokespers­on, Mlimandlel­a Ndamase, started by saying the City of Johannesbu­rg is staying in control of the water supply system.

Question: Have the mayor and the administra­tion lost control of the water system? I ask because, on Friday, 15 March, the mayor said: “As things stand, all systems are currently recovering and supply has been restored to most of the previously affected areas.” On Sunday, 17 March, Johannesbu­rg Water said its systems were still critical.

Answer: No control has been lost on the city’s water supply systems. Indeed, as of Friday, 15 March, the system was recovering steadily from the impact of the power outages that affected bulk water pumping into the [Johannesbu­rg] system on 3 and 4 March.

By Friday all residents were receiving water supply via their taps as usual, with some low pressure in areas linked to areas supplied through the Linden 1 and 2 towers – mainly the Blairgowri­e suburb.

Johannesbu­rg Water monitors the water supply system continuous­ly and even under normal circumstan­ces, where no outage has occurred. It regularly warns residents when demand peaks drasticall­y [and] threatens the reliabilit­y and capacity of the system.

Among other factors, the recent heatwaves have resulted in a drastic water demand peak. As a responsibl­e water supplier, Johannesbu­rg Water must warn residents to use less water to avoid excessive water depletion. Water use patterns in our city and beyond are higher per capita than internatio­nal standards in large cities like Johannesbu­rg. Many need to be made aware that we are a water-scarce country and that Johannesbu­rg is the only city in the world not built along a riverbank or ocean. Paris has the Seine, London the Thames, New York the Hudson River, etc.

(Contrary to what Ndamase said, large parts of Soweto, the deep south of the city – areas such as Orange Farm, Lawley and Lenasia – and the west had low to no water last weekend, impacting most of the city.)

Question: The mayor is also quoted as saying that Johannesbu­rg is not experienci­ng a water crisis. Is this correct, and what did he mean by this?

Answer: The mayor defines a crisis as a water supply system under total collapse, with no mitigation or alternativ­e supply options, or a … humanitari­an crisis where the general population has “zero” access to water.

While he doesn’t define the current outage as a crisis, he doesn’t attach any less significan­ce to the frustratio­n and disruption caused by the absence of water from normal operations. It remains challengin­g and urgent, and he empathises with residents. He, too, lives in Johannesbu­rg and was severely affected by the unavailabi­lity of water in the high-lying areas.

The outage was an isolated and infrequent occurrence. You had 50% of the Johannesbu­rg water supply area affected by a water disruption.

It caused great panic and was devastatin­g for both residents and businesses.

However, the outages were repaired swiftly, and within a day to two days many systems began supplying water to residents, which was [normal] in some areas and with some low pressure in others. Of the 60 out of 128 systems affected by the outage, 54 recovered quite steadily and only six, mainly the Linden and Kensington B reservoirs and towers, experience­d delays.

These systems are located at the end of the water supply network and, unfortunat­ely, include some high-lying areas, making the recovery more challengin­g than the other areas. Overall, most of the city enjoys a reliable and consistent water supply.

A 30-minute interrupti­on in water pumping from a pump station such as Eikenhof needs a five- to six-hour recovery period to reach normal pumping pressure.

The total outages of 3 and 4 March meant water pumping was severely affected by nearly 48 hours of outages at different points and linked to several events. Hence, the system recovery was protracted.

It may take a few minutes or hours to repair the power outage, but once repaired, the pumps are re-energised one at a time and gradually increase in volume to avoid overchargi­ng the system and causing further power trips and potential pressure explosions in the pipelines.

So, a complex and delicate process is put in place to ensure the system is diligently managed to protect it from total collapse.

Question: Is Johannesbu­rg’s water not a severe crisis that demands an emergency or declaratio­n of disaster response?

Answer: Several areas throughout the city have experience­d water outages at various points.

These have been isolated and linked to a variety of factors. Some have been due to power outages, some to vandalism, infrastruc­ture theft, etc.

Some water supply disruption­s have been preplanned to allow for maintenanc­e and water infrastruc­ture upgrades. Where this has been the case, residents have been forewarned and alternativ­e water sources have been provided, as is the case with unplanned outages.

We accept that our infrastruc­ture has several challenges. The city has aged infrastruc­ture that is vulnerable to leaks and incessant disruption. These are sporadic occurrence­s [of water interrupti­ons], more regular in some areas than others, but the City of Johannesbu­rg is doing its best to maintain and replace old infrastruc­ture where possible and rapidly.

We empathise with our residents in areas where these disruption­s are regular and accept that the investment in infrastruc­ture needs to catch up to the rate of developmen­t realised in some areas.

The City currently has many projects in various design, procuremen­t and constructi­on phases to respond to this challenge. However, its limited resources will only allow it to respond promptly.

The City’s current water and sanitation infrastruc­ture backlog is estimated to be R27-billion, and the City is spending only R1-billion annually on water and sanitation infrastruc­ture.

Ideally, this should be R3-billion attend to the backlogs decisively.

We are talking to the national government and private sector to consider several financial instrument­s that may assist the City with resources to meet the infrastruc­ture demands.

Question:

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Is the mayor a man of his word? At a crisis meeting I attended in the south last year, the mayor announced that a task team would be set up to deal with the community’s issues.

I checked back with them this week.

The task team’s promise came to naught. They have not heard back from the mayor’s office except for a single terms-of-reference meeting.

Answer: We will follow up on the same and advise.

 ?? ?? Residents of Dube and Meadowland­s fetch water on 15 March in Soweto after faults and power outages at several pumping stations affected many suburbs in Johannesbu­rg. Photo: Fani Mahuntsi/gallo Images
Johannesbu­rg mayor Kabelo Gwamanda at Diepkloof Hostel in Soweto on 28 June 2023. Photo: Lubabalo Lesolle/gallo Images
Residents of Dube and Meadowland­s fetch water on 15 March in Soweto after faults and power outages at several pumping stations affected many suburbs in Johannesbu­rg. Photo: Fani Mahuntsi/gallo Images Johannesbu­rg mayor Kabelo Gwamanda at Diepkloof Hostel in Soweto on 28 June 2023. Photo: Lubabalo Lesolle/gallo Images
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