Water, Sewage & Effluent May-June 2018 | Page 3

I will select the best letter, whose writer will win a space on our fortnightly bulletin, offering exposure of their company to the readership, with a logo and link to their website. So come and participate! Please send all letters to [email protected] the city, with informal settlements in low-lying areas also subjected to flooding. In amongst all this chaos, South Africa is searching for all manner of sustainable water solutions, from desalination to water from waste and pondering on how municipalities can generate water revenue in the wake of reduced usage. But there is hope, as increasingly ingenious solutions are sought … from aquifers to secret Table Mountain dams. On the Antarctic horizon, the vision of dragging an iceberg to our shores has been mooted. Salvage master Nicholas Sloane (best known for leading the salvage operation of the wrecked Costa Concordia in September 2013) believes it is practicable to tether an iceberg that has broken off from Antarctica and drifted northwards, around 2 700km south-west of Cape Town, and tow it to the Mother City to melt and use. According to research, over 2 000 billion tonnes of icebergs break off from the Antarctic every year and drift until they melt in warmer water. While the group says that only 7% of icebergs would be suitable though, a mere three tugboats and a tanker should be all it takes. The City is not that convinced, however, and the idea is still on ice. u Kim Kemp | Editor | [email protected] Water Sewage & Effluent May/June 2018 1 I f South Africa isn’t being crisped in the African sun, it’s being washed away from the ‘Rains down in Africa’. While huge tracts of the country continue to sag under the relentless drought, sighs of relief are emanating out of Cape Town as it supposedly avoids the dreaded Day Zero — by a whisker. In the meantime, in neighbouring Mozambique, following failed rains, the country’s disaster management council imposed strict water rationing across the capital city, with taps turned off every other day, and all irrigation prohibited. Unlike Cape Town, though, Maputo has not reached the stage where officials have predicted a ‘Day Zero’, but it is close on the Mother City’s heels as, without urgent attention, it could be the next southern African city to suffer extreme water shortages — and even run dry. Mother Nature is relentless, erratic, and harsh. Running dry is now not an immediate issue with Cape Town. While the winter rainfall patterns could not be forecast with any certainty, flooding was always a known hazard and several departments have worked hard to lessen the impact of such occurrences during the rainy season. And not a moment too soon. Just as the Mother City was breathing a little freer, torrential rains slashed Cape Town, drowning any hope of normality, resulting in flash flooding and the closure of some roads in We are looking for participation from our varied readership and from those ‘on-the- ground’ within the water sector. We want to hear your opinions on current affairs, on improvements to the publication, and even offer you a space to vent. technology An iceberg appears to dwarf a 3 000-tonne ship in the Antarctic Peninsula. To the editor A veritable flood of solutions