‘Low to no water supply’ alert issued for these parts of Tshwane
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By Citizen Reporter
2 years ago
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The Mapleton system — which supplies the eastern parts of Tshwane — suffered the greatest impact of the flooding and may take even longer than two weeks to be fully operational again.
The system receives water from the Zuikerbosch purification and pumping station which experienced flooding this week.
Tshwane flooding fiasco: Slow recovery on cards for Mapleton system
Rand Water notified Tshwane metro of the flooding which occurred when the water utility was fixing a major water leak on their B8 pipeline from the Zuikerbosch water treatment plant to the Mapleton booster pumping station on Wednesday 12 April.
Pretoria Record reports this caused all Rand Water reservoirs to be depleted, some of which supply Tshwane areas.
City of Tshwane spokesperson Selby Bokaba said the water utility updated the metro that all equipment that had water ingress, was repaired with pumping resuming on 12 April.
“Pumping stations are now pumping at full capacity. The Mapleton system that supplies parts of Tshwane, suffered the greatest impact and, as a result, its recovery will be slow and might take more than two weeks to fully recover.”
Moreleta reservoir: Bellevue, Brummeria (all extensions), Chrysler Park, Georgeville, Lindo Park, Lydiana, Lynnwood Manor, Mopani, Navors, Scientia, Silverton (all extensions), Vlakfontein and Weavind Park
Murrayfield reservoir: La Concorde, La Montagne, Meyerspark (all extensions), Murrayfield, Salieshoek and Val-de-Grace
Parkmore LL reservoir: Alphen Park, Ashley Gardens, Constantia Park, De Beers, Faerie Glen, Garsfontein, Lynnwood Glen, Lynnwood Park, Maroelana, Menlyn, Newlands, Tshwane and Waterkloof Glen
Affected Tshwane residents urged to use water sparingly
“The metro sincerely apologises for the inconvenience that may be encountered as a result of the above-mentioned repairs and appeals to all residents to continuously use water sparingly during this time,” Bokaba said.
Edited by Cornelia le Roux. This article, by Terry-Ann Diergaardt, first appeared in Pretoria Rekord. Read the original article here.