The Mercury

Flood damage cost mounts to R25bn

- KHETHUKUTH­ULA XULU and THAMI MAGUBANE

KWAZULU-NATAL Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs (Cogta) has said the cost of damages to public and private infrastruc­ture after last month’s floods, adds up to R25 billion.

The department said the devastatio­n was difficult to comprehend with more than 400 lives lost including: 386 in eThekwini

31 in Ilembe

7 in Ugu District

4 in King Cetshwayo

3 in Harry Gwala

2 in uMgungundl­ovu

2 in uMzinyathi

It said 48 people were still unaccounte­d for, while the lives of 77 600 people were severely disrupted, 7 286 homes were destroyed and 12 062 homes partially destroyed.

Cogta MEC Sipho Hlomuka said R1bn had been allocated to the province to deal with flood-related damage.

“We have not received the allocated funds.

“However, we are in talks with provincial and national Treasury on processes we need to follow to receive those funds,” said Hlomuka.

He said the department had to restructur­e its budget to accommodat­e the flood damage.

To date, disaster management teams have conducted 748 search operations and more than 168 rescues.

“Disaster management teams are still on the ground and continue to provide support for relief purposes and are searching for the missing,” he said.

The floods also destroyed critical infrastruc­ture that brings water, electricit­y and sanitation to many communitie­s.

Hlomuka said technical teams from affected municipali­ties had been working round-the-clock to restore the supply of these services to communitie­s.

With rising concerns about the expected time frames for water infrastruc­ture to be repaired, Hlomuka said that water supply restoratio­n had improved to between 70% to 80% in most regions and 40% to 45% in the northern region.

Hlomuka said because restoratio­n of water had progressed in most areas, the focus would now be on the protection of resources to minimise deteriorat­ion.

“Most water resources (rivers) in eThekwini district have been found to have a significan­tly high percentage of water contaminan­ts (mainly E.coli) due to raw sewer spillages owing to water treatment works infrastruc­ture damages,” he said.

He said this increased the risk of a potential outbreak of waterborne diseases such as cholera, hepatitis, typhoid fever etc.

“We are appealing to communitie­s to exercise extreme caution when dealing with water from rivers,” he said.

EThekwini deputy mayor Philani Mavundla detailed the extent of the damage to the sewer infrastruc­ture during a recent interview with The Mercury.

Mavundla, who is also the chairperso­n of the city’s human settlement­s and infrastruc­ture committee, has been leading the efforts to reconnect services.

He said since the floods, the city had faced the risk of environmen­tal disaster due to sewer pollution.

He said they feared that where the pipes had been damaged, sewage could leak into streams and rivers close to those areas, thereby contaminat­ing that water and environmen­t.

“Eighty percent of our sewer infrastruc­ture was damaged and or washed away.

“The pollution started on the day of the disaster, and we are faced with a serious challenge.

“There are some areas where we have been able to bridge (repair infrastruc­ture) and there are areas where we have not been able to do so,” he said.

Water and sanitation expert Neil MacLeod said while he had not seen any extensive damage, there was a risk if the infrastruc­ture was damaged.

He said the sanitation infrastruc­ture was divided into the treatment works and the pipes in the ground – if the pipes were damaged, it could lead to ground contaminat­ion while if the treatment works were damaged, it could lead to contaminat­ion of rivers and beaches.

 ?? ?? KZN provincial Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs MEC Sipho Hlomuka.
KZN provincial Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs MEC Sipho Hlomuka.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa