Amatola Water again misses deadline to fix Makhanda's water woes

 Makhanda residents collect water from a tanker.


26-01-2024
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News 24
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  • Residents of Makhanda have endured water outages, and upgrades to a water treatment plant are six years behind schedule.
  • The latest completion date is April 2024, after a December 2023 deadline was missed.
  • Amatola Water has blamed the delays on the slow progress of the contractor. The contractor refused to comment.


Makhanda's water woes are set to continue this year, with Amatola Water missing its latest deadline.



Amatola Water has announced that it expects to complete upgrades to the James Kleynhans Water Treatment Works only at the end of April, according to GroundUp.



After the liquidation of one of the contractors, Mamlambo Construction, in 2022, December 2023 was given as the completion date.



The project started in 2015 and was meant to be finished by December 2017 for R102 million. The deadline keeps getting extended and the budget has ballooned to R393 million.



Increased pumping capacity is desperately needed if Makhanda's residents are to see an end to years of water outages. Currently, there is only daytime supply.



Amatola Water is a state-run utility, with a legislated mandate to provide water to a large part of the Eastern Cape.



"The main reason for the incompleteness of the project is slow progress by the contractor, which the engineer is monitoring closely to ensure that the contractor remains on schedule," said Amatola Water spokesperson Amanda Skritch.



Thabang Mokgatle, of the contractor Water and Wastewater Technology SA, said, "no comment".



Skritch also said:



Regrettably, the ongoing water interruptions can be attributed to a series of challenges experienced in both the James Kleynhans and Waainek Water Treatment Works operations.



She said a "key factor" was flooding at the Howieson's Poort pump station, which supplies Waainek, in November 2023. This has meant the loss of eight of 18 megalitres per day.



"This unexpected event has had a profound effect on the ability to maintain regular water supply," she said.



According to the DA's Geoff Embling: "There was no operator on standby when a joint on the pump's suction valve pushed out, causing the flooding."



Skritch said: "The other factor is leaks that continue to be problematic, affecting the security of supply."



Embling said the loss to leaks was "estimated by some to be in excess of 40% of the total supply".



The James Kleynhans Treatment Works – situated on the east side of Makhanda – receives its water from the Orange and Fish rivers.



Embling said the current maximum bulk water that could be supplied to Makhanda was about 12 megalitres per day from James Kleynhans and six megalitres per day from Howieson's Poort.



He said the James Kleynhans upgrades were finally gaining momentum, and work done on the roof and electric controls for the new building housing the filter beds was completed over the holiday period.



If the upgrades go to plan and the new filter beds are ready for use in February, James Kleynhans will alone produce 20 megalitres per day, he said.

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