Are informal settlement residents really to blame for Cape Town’s polluted vleis?
An inadequate sewerage system and a lack of access to sanitation are the root causes according to experts
- Cape Town’s major public recreational water bodies were closed for months in the past year.
- The City blames ageing infrastructure, vandalism and theft at its pump stations, and the dumping of foreign objects into the sewers.
- An expert points out that dumping happens because the stormwater system is a second sewer system for people who lack access to solid waste removal.
- The City’s sewerage system is hopelessly inadequate and unable to cope.
Cape Town’s major public recreational water bodies have been closed for months during the past year because of sewage pollution. The City blames ageing infrastructure, vandalism and theft at its pump stations, and the dumping of foreign objects into the sewers.
But an inadequate drainage system that cannot cope with the wastewater flowing from treatment works, stormwater drains and informal settlements is the main cause, according to Jo Barnes, a public health professor at Stellenbosch University’s Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences.
Zeekoevlei has been closed since July this year. Zandvlei, closed since May, briefly opened again for two weeks in October before closing again. Rietvlei opened again on 17 November for intermediate recreational use since it closed in June. Similarly, the Milnerton lagoon and Diep River have experienced persistent pollution issues for years.
The pollution at these waterbodies is the “knock-on effect of a poorly functioning system” said Barnes.
Water quality test results conducted by the City showed frequent and dangerously high levels of E. coli in the waterbodies. A petition with nearly 15,000 signatures has called on the City to urgently address the sewage spills at Zandvlei.
The pollution problem at the three vleis grabs the headlines because of the “recreational component” says Liz Day, an independent freshwater ecologist who put together the latest Inland Water Quality report for the City, released in February.
“In fact, throughout the City there are large areas where there is just free-flowing sewage, either flowing into the sea or flowing into the streets or into the canals,” says Day.
Sewage infrastructure inadequate
In a statement in September this year the Ciy said, “Over the next three years, almost 50% of the City’s R25-billion capital expenditure plan will be invested in water and sanitation infrastructure. The City is further projecting a minimum R8-billion investment for major Waste Water Treatment Works (WWTWs) upgrades over the next ten years.”
This will incresse capacity at the Zandvliet, Potsdam, and Macassar wastewater treatment works.
The City said in August this year that R60 million was needed for repairs and upgrades at its 32 pump stations because of vandalism during the last financial year.
Day thinks there needs to be more urgency in the repairing and maintaining of treatment works and pump stations, because of the long-term effects on the ecology of the vleis. Sewage pollution increases nutrients in the water promoting weed growth, algae blooms, and the spread of water hyacinth, which is an invasive species. The sewage acts as “a large volume of fertilizer”.
“It’s not acceptable for sewage … to simply pass into open water canals and rivers, and ultimately vleis and then the sea,” said Day.
The City said that failures at pump stations at Zandvlei, which caused some of the sewage spills this year, were caused by solid and foreign objects being dumped in the sewer lines.
But Barnes points out that many people living in informal settlements dump things because they don’t have proper or reliable solid waste removal facilities. The stormwater system in most of our informal settlements operates as a second sewer system, primarily because people who live there have inadequate access to sanitation facilities.
“Blaming the behaviour of people when they have inadequate facilities is unfair and it does nothing to solve the problem,” said Barnes.
Population growth over the past few years has outstripped the City’s capacity for waste removal and sanitation.
The City has said that it is taking various remedial actions to address the pollution in the three vleis and that it continues to investigate all the sources of pollution.
The City said that currently it was helping the ecological functioning of Zandvlei by removing pondweed and algae, manipulating the mouth to allow sea water to flow in, and also dredging to flush the vlei.
A dredging programme was being considered for Zeekoevlei and Rietvlei too. Pondweed and algal removal was being done at Rietvlei.
Next: PRASA CEO Zolani - aka Kgosie - Matthews: an embarrassing appointment
Previous: Philippi informal settlement residents say they are the “forgotten” community of Cape Town
Letters
Dear Editor
From 1981-1992 I fished extensively at all the vleis, the latter period in the Diep River along Gie Rd in Table View. We were carp fishing. We attempted the Black and Liesbeeck River around Observatory and Pinelands but they were filthy even then.
Besides the human settlement issues, which are major socio/political issues in South Africa, seriously adding to the problem, the City has ignored the vleis and rivers for decades. Unfortunately, Zeekoevlei and the Diep Rivers' issues are exasperated by informal settlements with no sanitation but ultimately the City allowed this to happen. All rivers, including the Kuils and Elsies, at some point or for large sections run through informal and formal settlements to the sea. Add the poor standard and/or capacity of waste treatment and hence the problem. Most Cape rivers are perennial, which also amplifies the problem.
Dear Editor
COCT needs to overhaul their whole wastewater system, prioritising sanitation plants instead of trying to organise over development and making the sea the escape route of inadequate planning. Prioritise the Cape Flats area and Khayelitsha, Gugulethu areas. You can create jobs as well: you don't have to run to Amazon to stuff up Liesbeeck Park River and offend indigenous people by desecrating the area. Start thinking out of the box. Make a "year of rivers and vleis", and get locals on board to turn this around. You have the budget. Now all you need to do is to put the citizens of Cape Town and the whole peninsula first.
© 2021 GroundUp. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
You may republish this article, so long as you credit the authors and GroundUp, and do not change the text. Please include a link back to the original article.
We put an invisible pixel in the article so that we can count traffic to republishers. All analytics tools are solely on our servers. We do not give our logs to any third party. Logs are deleted after two weeks. We do not use any IP address identifying information except to count regional traffic. We are solely interested in counting hits, not tracking users. If you republish, please do not delete the invisible pixel.