In PHOTOS: Cape Town’s Water Crisis
The perilous state of Cape Town’s water supply is starkly visible… [This is part one of a GroundUp special series on Cape Town’s water crisis.] There are six major dams in Cape Town: Berg River, Steenbras Lower, Steenbras Upper, Theewaterskloof, Voëvlei, and Wemmershoek. These hold 99.6% of the city’s water capacity, with eight smaller dams, mostly […]
The perilous state of Cape Town’s water supply is starkly visible…
If you zoom in on the photos above, you can see yellow vertical markers on the right side of the concrete column. There are four more visible in May 2017 than in June 2016.
The Berg River Dam is the third largest dam supplying the city, behind Theewaterskloof and Voëlvlei. The dam was at 33% of capacity last week, higher than the 27% this time last year, but much lower than the 54% level in 2015, and 90.5% in 2014.
Though the dam wall currently stores more than 42,000 megalitres of water, parts of the reservoir are dry. In areas of the dam higher up, GroundUp reporters were able to walk across the reservoir from one bank to another. There is no sign of plant or animal life at the dam and the earth was cracked in places due to arid conditions.
Text by Trevor Bohatch. Photos by Ashraf Hendricks
Published originally on GroundUp
DROUGHT CRISIS WARNING: Dam levels are at 11,2% #ThinkWaterCT and use water only for washing, drinking and cooking. https://t.co/lmhYmDT7oH pic.twitter.com/m3yNAynetc
— City of Cape Town (@CityofCT) May 16, 2017
#TipTuesday:Did you know that even a slow drip could waste up to 30 litres of water per day?Fix leaky taps and save water. #journeyofwater💦 pic.twitter.com/QkOUhxW58X
— WWF South Africa (@WWFSouthAfrica) May 16, 2017