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New research underscores the need to counter the effects of urban growth on drought by ensuring cities have enough green spaces to keep them liveable.
Storms caused widespread flooding in and around Cape Town in September 2023.
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Cape Town’s storms caused severe flooding and extreme winds that fan wildfires. Early warning systems are important in protecting people from these dangers.
Freshwater challenges occur frequently in South Africa.
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‘Water-shifting’ should not be a permanent measure. It does not address the cause of the current crisis.
A tractor ploughs a field in the Philippi Horticultural Area in Cape Town, South Africa.
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The work done by the campaign before, during and after the drought remains important for the food security of Cape Town
A family of African elephants walk through the Addo Elephant National Park in South Africa’s Eastern Cape Province.
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Political and social instability in the country, as seen in frequent mass protests and xenophobia, threaten the flow of African tourists.
Alien pine trees, which use substantially more water than the native vegetation of the Cape Mountains, reduce river flows to dams that supply the city’s water.
Martin Kleynhans
March 14, 2022
Petra Brigitte Holden , University of Cape Town ; Alanna Rebelo , Agricultural Research Council ; Joyce Kimutai , University of Cape Town ; Kamoru Abiodun Lawal , University of Cape Town ; Mark New , University of Cape Town ; Piotr Wolski , University of Cape Town ; Romaric C. Odoulami , University of Cape Town , and Tiro Nkemelang , University of Cape Town
Clearing alien trees before the drought hit could have reduced the impact of climate change on water supply during the ‘Day Zero’ drought.
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Academic research can have a direct impact on people's lives. It's crucial to come together to deal with problems like climate change. If we don't, the poor and vulnerable will suffer the most.
Water flows from the Vaal Dam after several sluice gates were opened in February 2021. Heavy rains in the Gauteng province resulted in a spike in dam levels.
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Gauteng citizens need to know the uncomfortable truth: for the next six years, their water supplies will increasingly have to be restricted.
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The agency will ensure that large water users such as municipalities, public utilities and large companies continue to fund the construction and operation of the large water systems they depend on.
Cape Town residents queueing to refill water containers at the Newlands Brewery Spring Water Point in January 2018.
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Artificially dimming the sun, by injecting reflective particles into the upper atmosphere, could reduce the risk of Day Zero level droughts in Cape Town by more than 90% in the future.
The Cape Town drought was one of the longest and the worst to have affected the city and the region in recent times.
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Regional tourism took a huge knock from the Day Zero experience in Cape Town, South Africa. Here are the lessons learnt.
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The real crisis with water supply is that South Africa doesn’t know what it doesn’t know.
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South Africa’s Department of Water and Sanitation has plans in place to ensure adequate water supply until 2040 and beyond.
Some towns in northern NSW are likely to see empty dams next year.
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Once water is used in washing, cleaning or even sewerage it can be safely and reliably treated. The treated water is then safe to drink – identical to the original water.
Lessons learned from the threat of Cape Town’s “Day Zero.”
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Cities need to pay attention to how extreme weather events effect their resources.
What lessons were learnt from Cape Town’s “Day Zero”?
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Cape Town’s draft strategy on water supply is out for comment, but important elements are missing from it.
There needs to be a more systematic approach to classifying rainfall seasonality in South Africa.
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There are regions in South Africa where it hasn’t been established if the rainy season is in summer or winter.
Cape Town residents queuing for water during the water crisis.
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Water supply systems weren’t designed to deal with altering weather patterns brought about by climate change. This needs to change.
People in the township of Khayelitsha near Cape Town have been managing water shortages for ages.
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South Africa is a water-scarce country where inequity and a lack of fairness and justice pervades water distribution.
The dangerously low Threewaterskloof dam, a major supplier of water to the city.
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Cape Town is testing new strategies to nudge domestic users into reducing their water use.