Cape Town residents have been warned that their high festive water usage has brought “Day Zero” closer, by more than three weeks.
Day Zero is the day that almost all of the taps in the city will be turned off and people will have to queue for water at approximately 200 sites across the peninsula. Although some essential services will stay connected, almost all residential suburbs will be cut off. “If water consumption continues to rise, together with the very hot windy conditions which increase evaporation losses, we can expect Day Zero to happen as soon as 18 March 2018. This is a terrifying prospect,” said the City of Cape Town’s Water and Sanitation Director, Peter Flower. He said residential customers remain the largest portion of water users. “If we can bring consumption down to 500 million litres per day, we will be able to avoid Day Zero.”Water usage up
The total water storage has fallen by 1.1% and dam levels sitting stand at 33%. The city’s overall water usage rose to 641 million litres per day. “The city’s teams are hard at work this festive season to ensure that the average response time to leaks or burst pipes is under two hours and that we maintain the advanced pressure management system that is limiting demand.“We will also be rolling out an additional 40 000 water management devices from January onwards to high consumption households ignoring water restrictions. We have already installed more than 21 000 water management devices on the properties of high users to date and this will continue over December,” said Flower.