Sunday Times

Beaches in Durban ‘left to erode’

- By TONY CARNIE

● Durban’s beaches are washing away from erosion by the sea, and instead of fixing the problem, the city wants to pump R50m into rescuing a marooned pier in the name of saving marine life at its flagship water park.

That’s according to city residents, who are demanding to know why the municipali­ty is “wasting” millions of rands when the city’s vital beachfront defence system has all but collapsed after 10 years of maintenanc­e delays and neglect.

The eThekwini municipali­ty published plans last month to spend R50m to lengthen Moyo’s Pier, next to uShaka Marine World, apparently to ensure a more reliable supply of sea water to marine fish tanks in the water park.

Last year, the city spent R15m on an emergency pumping scheme to restore several tourist beaches that had been washed away by the sea.

The city acknowledg­ed that its sandpumpin­g scheme had been dysfunctio­nal for a decade — but gave an assurance that the scheme would be operationa­l by July 2018. However, nearly a year later the scheme is still not working.

Last month, the city said uShaka was no longer able to extract enough sea water to flush and replenish its marine display tanks — saying that “since its inception, the extraction system has not provided the design volume”.

The marine theme park, which opened in 2004, draws its sea water from a network of 60 wells located directly beneath Moyo’s Pier.

“During sand-pumping events, elevated seabed levels cause the flow of the extraction system to drop to dangerousl­y low levels, placing marine life in the aquarium at risk,” the city said. “Extending the pier will allow for 70 additional well points to be placed further seaward.”

But residents have challenged the city’s version, arguing that the R50m price tag to extend Moyo’s Pier by 100m could be avoided entirely if the municipali­ty just repaired its sand-pumping scheme.

Durban businessma­n and paddle-skier Johnny Vassilaros blamed the city, saying that the central beaches have been left with too little sand, while there is too much sand in the vicinity of Vetch’s Pier and the Point Waterfront.

“All that needs to be done is to curb the excessive pumping of sand on Vetch’s and uShaka beach and allow the sea to return to its original mark when the pier was built,” he said.

Fellow resident Malcolm Keeping agreed, saying all the problems would be solved and beaches would be saved if the city repaired its ailing pumping system.

City spokespers­on Msawakhe Mayisela said budget constraint­s nearly two decades ago meant the final length of Moyo’s Pier was shorter than the original design and needed to be extended. The city did not respond to queries about whether the R50m project was an effort to defend the new promenade and Point Waterfront developmen­t from coastal erosion. uShaka Marine World did not respond, and Bevarah Soban Baabu, project director of the Point Waterfront developmen­t, referred queries to the city.

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