The current water supplies held by the supply dams are estimated to meet Bulawayo’s water needs up to August next year.
But further triggering panic in the city is that the Upper Ncema Dam was decommissioned at the end of last year. The devastating dry spell which has gripped much of Southern Africa in the wake of the El Nino weather phenomenon is fast raising the possibility of a serious water crisis in the entire drought-prone Matabeleland region in Zimbabwe. According to the Financial Gazette Local authorities have been watching the prolonged dry spell with horror as water supplies continue to dwindle in dams. The country’s second largest city, Bulawayo, is already on edge as the dry spell poses a real threat to its water supplies. Bulawayo city fathers might meet this month to discuss the issue as they seek to conserve water before the situation deteriorates into a major disaster. The city, with one-million residents, last went through the worst of its water crisis back in 2013. At the time, residents spent as much as four days every week without a single drop of water dripping from their taps. Bulawayo relies on six supply dams for its water needs namely: Mtshabezi, Umzingwane, Insiza, Inyankuni, Lower Ncema and Upper Ncema.