Drought-hit Bulawayo limits tap water to one day a week

A cow stands on caked mud before a small patch of water at a dam as the region deals with a prolonged drought near Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.
A cow stands on caked mud before a small patch of water at a dam as the region deals with a prolonged drought near Bulawayo, Zimbabwe.
Image: PHILIMON BULAWAYO

Zimbabwe’s second-biggest city, Bulawayo, limited access to tap water to just one day a week on Friday as reservoir levels fell to dangerously low levels amid the country’s worst drought in years.

After a devastating drought in 2019 and patchy rains in 2020, water shortages have worsened in Bulawayo, in the west of the country, forcing families to trek to unsafe wells as taps run dry.

The city council said it was decommissioning a third dam on Friday after reservoir levels fell to 6% of capacity, and would now rely on three dams and an underground aquifer for supplies.

But the remaining three reservoirs are only about 30% full and water levels continue to fall.

That means up to 65 megalitres of water is available daily against demand of 155 megalitres, the council said.

To avoid the system from collapsing due to the supply-demand deficit, a more stringent [water cut] regime of 144 hours [a week] will be introduced

“To avoid the system from collapsing due to the supply-demand deficit, a more stringent [water cut] regime of 144 hours [a week] will be introduced,” it said.

Bulawayo has gradually increased water cuts from three days a week at the start of 2020, saying it is grappling with “one of the most parched seasons in modern history”.

Analysts say Zimbabwe’s economy will go deeper into recession as it battles climate-induced shocks that are causing hunger, effects of the coronavirus and monetary woes that have seen inflation spike to three-digit levels. — Reuters


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