THE DA ANNOUNCED THAT DAY ZERO WILL NOT HAPPEN IN 2018

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THE DA ANNOUNCED THAT DAY ZERO WILL NOT HAPPEN IN 2018
News, Accidents, Robberies & Incidents | Western Cape | City of Cape Town

9 Mar 2018, Cape Town: Cape Town, which is in the midst of a major water crisis caused by a three-year drought, finally delivered some good news to residents: "Day Zero, the day the city’s reservoirs fall below 13.5 percent and residential taps would be turned off, may not come this year after all."

Furthermore, DA Leader, Mmusi Maimane, said on Wednesday: "Day Zero will not occur in 2018 and this means taps will stay open, provided Cape Town residents continue consuming water at current levels and there is decent rainfall."

The NFP’s Shaik Emam says the Public Protector should be called in to investigate the water crisis in CT and the WC and demanded government play a bigger role in solving the crisis.

The DA leader said consumption now sat at between 510 and 520-million litres per day, down from almost 1.2-billion litres in February 2015.

"This 60% reduction in consumption is an incredible achievement and outperforms many other cities across the world which faced severe droughts, including Sao Paulo, Melbourne, and the State of California," he added.

Maimane, however, said that while the collective achievement must be celebrated, "this is not the time for complacency".

"While it is now unlikely to occur in 2018, Day Zero is still a very real possibility during the 2019 summer months if we do not have significant rainfall this winter. I want to reiterate, and cannot stress enough, that we need to keep at current consumption levels until at least after the winter rainfall. We can and we must continue to use less than 50 litres of water (per person) per day so that Day Zero can be defeated in its entirety."

He added that he was confident that residents will not return to previous wasteful water practices.

"There is a 'new normal' in the Western Cape around water use. We must continue in this current spirit of utmost respect for this precious natural resource, and never waste it. It must also be made clear that this hinges on the national department of water and sanitation honouring its agreement as to the amount of bulk water that will be supplied to the city and the province over the year," said Maimane.

Depending on the extent of consumption and the amount of rain received over the winter months, the city may be in a position to scale back the current restrictions from Level 6B to Level 5 in the near future Maimane added.




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