As Cape Town drought bites, what is 'Day Zero'?

2018-02-08 08:12
(File)

(File)

Multimedia   ·   User Galleries   ·   News in Pictures Send us your pictures  ·  Send us your stories

Video

WATCH: Farmers donate millions of litres of water to Cape Town

2018-02-06 15:53

Farmers in the Elgin/Grabouw valley started releasing millions of litres of water from the Eikenhof Dam on Tuesday as part of a plan to assist drought-stricken Cape Town. Watch.WATCH

Cape Town - Cape Town is in the grip of a catastrophic three-year-long drought as winter rains have repeatedly failed causing dam levels to drop to dangerously low levels.

The City is now facing the prospect of having to turn off the taps under a Day Zero scenario to conserve the city's remaining water supplies.

This is what that would mean for the Mother City:

What is Day Zero? 

Day Zero is the day when City officials will be forced to cut off the normal water supply to 75% of the city's homes - more than one million households.

Instead, families and some commercial users will be forced to queue at 200 water collection points across the city to collect a daily allocation of 25 litres until water reserves are boosted.

Authorities have said that the collection sites will likely be guarded by police or military personnel.

What's being done to keep taps on?

At the start of February, the target for personal daily water usage was slashed from 87 litres to 50 litres.

A single toilet flush uses nine litres. It is hoped that usage cuts will buy the city time to find a solution - or for the rains of the southern winter to refill depleted dams.

Reducing household use has been prioritised over slashing industry's consumption as residential use accounts for 70% of consumption.

Among the other plans being considered to avert a shut-off is an increase in desalination efforts with the first City-run plant expected to come on line later this month.

The site, located at the V&A Waterfront, will initially produce two million litres a day. The city's demand is almost 600 million litres.

Three other plants are halfway to completion - but are running behind schedule.

Water is also being trucked in from elsewhere in South Africa by the Gift of the Givers charity organisation, which has sourced water from more than 70 collection points to be used to supply Cape Town's most vulnerable people.

Boreholes will also be key to averting Day Zero.

Read: Extra boreholes being drilled for Groote Schuur Hospital

City officials hope to draw 80 million cubic metres from an aquifer on the Cape Flats, 30 million cubic metres from the Atlantis aquifer and 40 million cubic metres from an aquifer at Table Mountain.

When will Day Zero happen?

The day shifts. It depends on the amount of water above 450 million litres used by the city each day.

For each day it exceeds that target, the shut-off draws nearer. But if the city uses less than that amount it moves further away.

It is currently forecast for May 11 with dam levels currently at 25.9%. Experts say anything below 10% may be unusable.

Will anyone be spared?

"Economically essential" sites will be spared the shut-off, officials say, as will impoverished informal settlements that already rely on communal taps.

The regional government has said that health facilities - both public and private - will also be guaranteed water supplies.

Schools will also be spared any initial shut-off.

Read more on:    cape town  |  drought  |  water crisis

Join the conversation!

24.com encourages commentary submitted via MyNews24. Contributions of 200 words or more will be considered for publication.

We reserve editorial discretion to decide what will be published.
Read our comments policy for guidelines on contributions.
NEXT ON NEWS24X

Inside News24

 
Traffic Alerts
There are new stories on the homepage. Click here to see them.
 
English
Afrikaans
isiZulu

Hello 

Create Profile

Creating your profile will enable you to submit photos and stories to get published on News24.


Please provide a username for your profile page:

This username must be unique, cannot be edited and will be used in the URL to your profile page across the entire 24.com network.

Settings

Location Settings

News24 allows you to edit the display of certain components based on a location. If you wish to personalise the page based on your preferences, please select a location for each component and click "Submit" in order for the changes to take affect.




Facebook Sign-In

Hi News addict,

Join the News24 Community to be involved in breaking the news.

Log in with Facebook to comment and personalise news, weather and listings.