Greater Maputo Metropolitan Area |
The Maputo Regional Water Company (AdeM) has announced drastic restrictions in the water supply to the Greater Maputo Metropolitan Area (Maputo and Matola cities, and Boane district) as from Tuesday.
There is simply not
enough water in the Umbeluzi river and the reservoir at the Pequenos
Libombos dam to continue normal supplies to Maputo. AdeM has therefore
announced that water will only be pumped to Maputo, Matola and Boane on
alternate days.
“Top priority” will
be given to water for human consumption, said the AdeM statement. The
company promised to indicate specific points where building companies
can send tanker trucks to pick up water for construction purposes.
The Greater Maputo
water supply system consists of the treatment and pumping station on the
Umbeluzi, seven distribution centres (at Boane, Belo Horizonte, Matola
Rio, Matola, Machava. Tsalala, Chamanculo, Alto Mae, Maxaqene and
Laulane), and around 3,000 kilometres of water pipes. The system
distributes about 240,000 cubic metres of water a day.
Consumers in the
modern parts of the cities, who store water in tanks on their roofs, may
not be badly hit, since the tanks could well hold enough water for two
days' use. But people living in outlying neighbourhoods, who depend on
standpipes, could face serious water shortages.
The AdeM statement
said nothing about the requirements of water guzzling industries, such
as the producers of beer and soft drinks.
Although it has
rained heavily in parts of southern Mozambique in recent weeks, the
level of the Pequenos Libombos reservoir, the main source of water for
the Umbeluzi pumping station, remains very low. Last Thursday the
reservoir was only 14 per cent full.
Saving the
situation will depend on rainfall upstream, particularly in Swaziland.
Without heavy rain in the near future, the severe restrictions on the
Maputo water supply could continue for weeks, or even months.
The government has
already banned the use of Umbeluzi water for the banana plantations and
other commercial, irrigated agricultural companies that usually depend
on the Umbeluzi. The southern regional water board (ARA-Sul) has issued
television warnings urging consumers not to waste water through such
unnecessary activities as washing cars or watering lawns.
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