Jacob Zuma, South Africa President |
Multi-million rand maintenance plan underway to stem agriculture losses in Clanwilliam. The Western Cape
Department of Agriculture will today (20 January 2017) conduct a site
visit to Clanwilliam after reports of a canal break earlier this week.
A panel in one of
the canals near the Bulshoek Dam broke and was washed away, due to aging
infrastructure. The resulting hole was reducing water supply to the
farms during the critical irrigation period and to local communities for
household use.
The water supply is
needed to irrigate table grapes and vineyards. In 2015, one of the
canals running off the Clanwilliam Dam collapsed, costing the
agriculture sector R100 million.
Alan Winde, MEC of
Economic Opportunities, explained that the Provincial Department of
Agriculture was halfway through a R4 million proactive maintenance
programme for the Clanwilliam dam canals.
While the dam's
maintenance does not fall under the province's mandate, these funds were
released on an emergency basis given the importance of the
infrastructure to the agriculture sector in the area.
Under the National
Water Act, the Lower Olifants River Water Users Association is
responsible for the maintenance and management of the facilities. Due to
increasing costs of maintaining the aging infrastructure, this
association did not have the funds to purchase the equipment needed in
2015. The dam is owned by the National Department of Water and
Sanitation.
"In 2015, the
Provincial Department of Agriculture allocated emergency funding of
close to R1 million to procure a generator and water pumps to stabilise
the water supply to farms and residents in the area, after a section of
the dam near Klawer collapsed.
Although this is
the responsibility of the National Department of Water and Sanitation,
we know that the damage affects farmers and residents, posing a threat
to the local agriculture sector and seasonal jobs.
Estimates of the
loss to agriculture for the 2015 incident are around R100 million. That
is why, shortly after, we committed to a proactive maintenance plan.
"According to the
plan, the Lower Olifants River Water Users Association assists the
Department of Agriculture in identifying the most critical areas for
maintenance. In 2016, we invested R1.2 million in fixing a 1 200m
stretch near Verdeling. This year, repair work on a 1 400m section of
the canal near Vredendal is earmarked as priority area," said MEC Winde.
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