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Water
train to thirsty Bulawayo?
IRIN News
April
24, 2007
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=71789
HARARE - With
its main water supply dams expected to run dry by September, Bulawayo,
Zimbabwe's second city, is planning to transport water by train
from the Zambezi River, about 400km northwest of the city.
"We are actively
pursuing the idea of a water train to bring the precious liquid,
because our current supplies will be exhausted by October. Under
the plan, the train would draw water from the Zambezi River before
it is purified and distributed to residents in Bulawayo," Moffat
Ndlovu, the city's town clerk told IRIN.
"During the
just ended rain season, our [five] dams received a total inflow
of just 11 million cu.m, as opposed to the 73 million cu.m of rainwater
that we received during the previous season," said Bulawayo's executive
mayor, Japhet Ndabeni-Ncube.
Bulawayo's unreliable
water supply has forced many industries to relocate from the dry
Matabeleland North Province, but the city has managed to supply
water to its 1.5 million people with the help of its dams, one of
which, the Lower Ncema, has already run dry and been decommissioned;
another, the Umzingwane, is expected to be decommissioned in June.
Two more dams,
the Upper Ncema and the Inyankuni, will run out of water in August,
according to the city council, leaving the municipality dependent
on the remaining water supply dam, Insiza, which is expected run
dry in October, before the onset of the rains.
In 1992, the
city's water supplies ran dry during the country's worst ever drought
but a Norwegian organisation came to the rescue, sinking 77 boreholes
in high water-yielding aquifers, but only 20 of them are still functioning.
A government
parastatal has taken over maintenance of the boreholes, but it has
said it did not have the funds to repair them. Most public infrastructure
in Zimbabwe is in a state of disrepair as the country battles the
world's highest annual inflation rate of more than 1,700 percent.
Fanuel Masikati,
spokesman for National Railways of Zimbabwe (NRZ), told IRIN that
the municipality had not yet officially approached them to transport
water from the Zambezi River.
"We are a bulk
carrier which can deliver any commodities to any part of the country,
although that would require some resource allocation for such a
programme to be properly implemented. We have never carried water
in bulk, and that would mean sourcing tanks for such a programme."
The council
has imposed stringent water rationing measures, but falling pressure
in some reservoirs has left parts of the city with no access to
water and residents have had to rely on municipal bowsers.
Mayor Ndabeni-Ncube
told IRIN they were also courting donors to sink boreholes around
the city to augment water supplies. "The European Union, the Japanese
embassy and some nongovernmental organisations [are] coming in to
assist us with the provision of safe drinking water through the
sinking and motorisation of boreholes."
Successive governments
since 1912 have postponed construction of a water pipeline from
the Zambezi River to alleviate perennial water shortages in Bulawayo.
Known as the Matabeleland Zambezi Water Project, the pipeline is
envisaged to create a green belt through Matabeleland North Province.
According to
a council resolution, the plight of the residents should be publicised,
so as to attract sympathisers to assist the city. However, it also
warns that "due care should be exercised so that the situation is
not over-dramatised to the extent of scaring away investors."
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