MunicipalNews

City council denies water crisis

JOBURG - The City of Johannesburg has refuted claims that the municipality may resort to water-rationing.

“Johannesburg Water would like to inform all residents of Johannesburg that there is a false report circulating about water shortages in the city,” the organisation said in a statement.

This follows a report by Times newspaper, claiming that Joburg will soon struggle to maintain a reliable water supply to its more than four million residents.

The newspaper stated that according to a report by Joburg Water, unless consumption was reduced, supply would outstrip demand by next year.

However, the utility has since denied the existence of the report.

Executive Mayor Parks Tau made an urgent call to the city council, Joburg Water and residents to use water sparingly to reduce water consumption per capita.

During his State of the City Address on 14 April, he noted that by 2030 the demand for water would increase by 30 percent.

“Living sustainability means grappling with the ‘perfect storm’ associated with the inseparability of water, food, energy and climate,” Tau said.

The Johannesburg Water echoed Tau’s sentiments, saying that efforts to reduce the city’s water demand were a collective responsibility. However, it has developed a Water Conservation and Water Demand Management Strategy, which includes interventions such as pressure management, water pipe replacement and active and passive leak detection.

These initiatives are currently being implemented.

However, DA spokesman for Johannesburg Water Councillor Ralf Bittkau said the municipality was not doing enough to avert the potential crisis.

“The fact is we might find ourselves having water-rationing.”

“All departments involved, including planning, Joburg Water and health need to come on board… at the moment we are destroying our waterways at an alarming rate.”

Water-rationing had been previously implemented to reduce consumption, imposing restrictions on people watering their gardens and issuing fines to those who failed to comply, he said.

Bittkau explained that in order to avoid water-rationing, water needed to be conserved and water pollution stopped.

He said in order to achieve this, unaccounted water must be reduced at a higher rate than it currently was and manufacturing companies must be compelled to install water treatment plants to ensure that the reuse water rather than utilising fresh water.

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