![]() |
Cape Town's dam levels higher than this time last yearIn the last couple of weeks the amount of water in the dams supplying Cape Town has overtaken 2017's levels. ![]() Image source: www.pexels.com The City of Cape Town’s Water Dashboard shows that as of 28 May, the dam levels are at 24% versus 19.8% in the same week in 2017. Also, the dam levels rose nearly three percentage points from last week’s 21.1%. This is a consequence of the recent rain and Capetonians using much less water. Last week the city used a mere 505-million litres of water per day. Compare this to last year, when on 29 May the city said, “Disappointingly, consumption remains at 666-million litres [daily], which is above the consumption target of 600-million litres.” The dam levels on 28 May 2018 versus the same week in 2017 are:
It is of course vital that Capetonians continue to use water frugally so that the dams can fill up and the risk of Day Zero can be avoided for at least a couple of years. Article originally published on GroundUp. |