
Pemmy Majodina Minister of Water and Sanitation
“We gather here not merely to unveil infrastructure, but to affirm the fundamental right of every citizen to reliable access to water.”The Minister notes that while South Africa has sufficient bulk water resources, the core challenge lies in infrastructure. “The challenge is ageing infrastructure, non payment, and vandalism, and ontop of that municipalities must invest back into water infrastructure.”
Infrastructure investment driving system resilience
Executive Mayor Dada Morero describes the project as a critical step in addressing historic supply challenges,
“This project addresses long-standing water supply challenges a major step forward in Joburg’s commitment to reliable and sustainable water services.”
He adds that the investment forms part of a wider infrastructure strategy, “This development forms part of the city’s broader effort to strengthen system fundamentals and meet future demand.” This refers to the projected developments in the Crosby and Hursthill reservoir complexes to bolster supply in the area.
The City is now pursuing additional large-scale investment into water systems, including pipeline upgrades and reservoir refurbishment programmes aimed at future-proofing supply in a rapidly growing urban environment. The Mayor outlines that this comes in the form of both weage and potable water pipe upgrades, “Johannesburg as 12000 kilometers of pipeline, R13 billion is needed to upgrade and preserve water supply.”
Delivering basic services and restoring public confidence
Ward Councillor Rickey Nair highlights the importance of delivery at a community level.
“We took decisive actions to make sure that the people of Joburg get what is one of the most basic necessities, and that is water.”The completion of the reservoir follows years of disruption in affected communities, where residents endured intermittent supply during construction and system upgrades. Minister Majodina acknowledges these challenges while pointing to the broader outcome. “Let this moment remind us that progress is possible, even in the face of difficulty.” She adds that the project signals a shift toward rebuilding confidence in municipal service delivery, “Leadership does not retreat in the face of difficulty, but rises to meet it.”
Education, skills and the future of water management
The launch also places emphasis on developing future capacity within the water sector.
Addressing learners present at the event, the Minister adds “The future is here we have water scientists and water engineers there.” Mayor Morero echoed the need to build technical skills pipelines, “We need engineers into this important field.”
Shared responsibility for water security
Government and city leadership stressed that infrastructure investment alone will not solve water challenges and Minister Majodina calls for collective responsibility, “Government cannot work alone. We need all of you.”
She also urged residents to protect infrastructure and use water responsibly, “We have a responsibility to guard against those who are vandalising water infrastructure.”
Looking ahead
The Brixton Reservoir and Water Tower represents a significant addition to Johannesburg’s water network, improving storage capacity and system flexibility and supporting economic and population growth.As Mayor Morero concluded: “It’s only when you don’t have water that you realise how important this resource is.”

Duncan Nortier