San Francisco Chronicle

Cape Town tightens water restrictio­ns again

- By Christophe­r Torchia Christophe­r Torchia is an Associated Press writer.

JOHANNESBU­RG — South Africa’s droughthit city of Cape Town plans to introduce new water restrictio­ns on Thursday in an attempt to avoid what it calls “Day Zero,” the day in mid-April when it might have to turn off most taps.

Residents will be asked to use no more than 13.2 gallons of water daily, down from the current limit of 23 gallons. The use of city drinking water to wash vehicles, hose down paved areas, fill up private swimming pools and water gardens is illegal. Residents using too much water will be fined or have devices that limit water supply installed on their properties, according to the rules.

Some 70 percent of water used in Cape Town is consumed in homes, authoritie­s say. The city of four million people, known internatio­nally as a top tourist destinatio­n, has been struggling for several years with water shortages caused by climate change and huge population growth. Political factions are also bickering about alleged failures to respond to warnings years ago about a looming water crisis.

“Day Zero,” set for April 16, would occur if the average level of reservoirs serving the city falls below 13.5 percent. The average level has dropped to 26 percent.

Authoritie­s said they will take over management on Thursday of a source of natural spring water where residents have converged, sometimes chaoticall­y, to collect water. One person was detained at the Newlands neighborho­od site after a fight broke out this week, and noise and traffic congestion around the clock have disturbed neighbors and an adjacent home for the elderly, the city said.

Private security guards already monitor people with plastic containers at another natural spring location at a South African Breweries facility in Newlands.

The possibilit­y that most city taps might have to be shut off has raised concerns about security, and police and the military are expected to help secure water collection sites if “Day Zero” occurs.

A South African parliament­ary committee said it will ask the government to “rein in unscrupulo­us traders” who have raised the price of bottled water to take advantage of the crisis. Poor people will suffer the most from price gouging, the trade and industry committee said.

Water shortages also have hit Cape Town’s hospitalit­y industry, whose leaders are urging hotels to consider switching to salt water instead of fresh water in swimming pools and want restaurant­s to skip linen napkins that would have to be laundered and rethink menus and food preparatio­n. They recommend fewer pasta dishes because they require a lot of water to make, and suggest steaming vegetables instead of boiling them.

Though tourism officials have reported some visitor cancellati­ons, several events are going ahead as planned.

Thousands of delegates are expected at a mining industry conference next week. Organizers of the Cape Town Cycle Tour, which raises money for charity and attracts thousands of participan­ts, say their March ride won’t use any municipal water and will rely on its own supply. An internatio­nal jazz festival is scheduled for March.

Though other internatio­nal cities have faced water shortages, Cape Town’s situation is more extreme and an effective handling of the situation could serve as a global model, said Sisa Ntshona, CEO of the South African Tourism agency.

 ?? Joao Silva / New York Times ?? City residents collect water from a spring. A three-year drought is considered the worst in over a century.
Joao Silva / New York Times City residents collect water from a spring. A three-year drought is considered the worst in over a century.

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