The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water/Air

Information and Discussions on Endangered Ecosystems
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Durban’s river-healing plan a roadmap for African cities to cope with climate floods

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A mountain of uprooted alien vegetation and litter forms a dam wall against the side of a river crossing in Durban, exacerbating the damage to city infrastructure during the April 2022 floods (Image: Ethekwini)

By Tony Carnie | 12 Jul 2022

A R719-million river clean-up and flood protection project in Durban could serve as a model to cushion other vulnerable cities in Africa from the impacts of climate change.
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Water is the source of life — yet it is also one of the most terrifying and relentless forces of nature.

This became very clear during the recent Durban rain bomb, when floodwaters in 18 local river courses damaged or ripped away tons of expensive, carefully engineered steel and concrete structures.

Bridges are designed with great care to withstand the ferocity of flooding, by allowing the water to flow past their supporting pillars. But what happens when they are blocked by mountains of water-borne vegetation and litter?

Instead of allowing the free passage of water, the unexpected accumulation of debris can turn bridges and road culverts into the equivalent of dam walls. When that happens, the power of water is bound to triumph, either by smashing down the obstacle or gouging a new path to get around it.

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A pile of plastic debris and alien vegetation obstructs a road culvert. The eThekwini Municipality estimates that damage to municipal road culverts due to more frequent floods will cost the city R151m by 2040. (Image: Ethekwini/C40 Cities)

And yet, there was comparatively little damage to road culverts in some parts of Durban in April — thanks in large part to a series of river management projects initiated by the eThekwini municipality and local conservation and private sector groups almost a decade ago.

Alien invader plants

Geoff Tooley, eThekwini’s senior manager for coastal stormwater and catchment management, estimates that more than 80% of the destructive river blockage in April was due to alien invader plants rather than solid waste or litter.

Speaking at the launch of the city’s new R719-million Transformative River Management Programme (TRMP) on 7 July, Tooley noted that historically, culverts were designed using purely hydraulic capacity calculations, with not enough thought given to the debris carried by rivers during storm events.

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A fuel storage tank bobs around on the debris-strewn shoreline at Blue Lagoon in April. Sights like this — along with the closure of Durban’s prime tourist beaches — are likely to become more common unless upstream river pollution is curbed (Image: Shawn Herbst)

Now, due to the more recent proliferation of alien vegetation and increased volumes of trash dumped in local rivers, the frequency of blockages has increased.

“Alien vegetation has a shallower root system in contrast to the deep-rooted indigenous vegetation, so during large storm flows, the aliens wash away easily, causing further erosion of larger trees and sandy soils which block culverts further downstream.”

This was not the case, however, in several sections of KwaMashu, Newlands and Umhlatuzana due to the Sihlanzimvelo Stream Cleaning Programme launched by the city’s roads and engineering department in 2012.

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Mbali Magwaza and Nonhlanhla Nkosi are earning new income by growing vegetables next to a partially restored stream bank in Sibisi Road, KwaMashu (Pic: Tony Carnie)

Sihlanzimvelo (“we are cleaning the environment”) focused on slashing the recurrent cost of repairs to road culverts by managing stream areas more effectively — while also creating jobs for Durban’s growing ranks of unemployed.

The current Sihlanzimvelo project covers nearly 500km of rivers on municipal land where human settlement densities are high, creating more than 600 jobs for local community cooperatives.

R59m a year saved

The benefits are obvious, says Tooley, who estimates that the scheme saves the city at least R59-million every year, based on avoided costs of damage to road culverts alone.

By scaling up Sihlanzimvelo and other river management schemes massively, the city believes it can save even more money while creating several thousand jobs and making a more meaningful impact to protect vulnerable communities from climate change hazards.

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Core members of Durban’s new Transformative River Management Programme (from left) Jo Douwes, Geoff Tooley, Chumisa Thengwa, Sean O’Donoghue and Shahid Solomon. By spending R719m on riverine governance over the next decade, eThekwini Municipality hopes to enable R4.5bn in co-investment by private landowners, other government departments and third parties (Image: Supplied)

However, this clean-up of rivers to protect culverts and bridges is just one dimension of Durban’s new TRMP project, which is being supported financially by the C40 Finance Facility (CFF) to cover more than 7,000km of Durban’s major river courses.

Ravi Pillay, MEC for environmental affairs in KwaZulu-Natal, notes that a GIS satellite-based early warning system developed by the University of KwaZulu-Natal and eThekwini ensured that no one drowned in the Quarry Road informal settlement in Durban during the recent floods — although more than 400 shacks in this area were subsequently damaged or washed away by floodwaters.

Pillay acknowledges that the proliferation of informal settlements in floodplains around Durban and other cities in Africa remains a major headache.

“This is a complex challenge. It’s not as easy as government just providing alternative land somewhere else… people want convenient access to jobs.”

African model

Hastings Chikoko, the C40 Cities regional director, has hailed Durban’s TRMP project as a model that can be emulated and adapted by mayors in other African cities increasingly vulnerable to severe storms due to climate change.

Already, C40 and other climate response networks are developing similar flood mitigation projects in Cape Town, Mbombela (Nelspruit), Nairobi, Mombasa and Accra.

“Floods are one of the most common climate-induced disasters in several parts of Africa predicted by the World Weather Attribution network,” says Chikoko, “So we need climate-resilient solutions that are built to last.”

A business case report prepared for the C40 Cities network by the FutureWorks consultancy group suggests that the historic failure to invest in (often ill-defined or intangible) “ecosystem services” has led to a significant decline in the condition and functionality of most of the city’s rivers.

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A section Caversham Road in Pinetown washed away due to a culvert blockage. (Image: Ethekwini)

Often, that’s stuff that older folk take for granted — basic things like clean drinking water in our dams, or unpolluted rivers where people can catch healthy fish, relax or paddle a canoe or enjoy a picnic after a hard week at the office.

“Riverine ecosystem service levels are already on average 42% lower than potential. Climate change is predicted to substantially impact rivers, further decreasing ecosystem services delivery by 11%”.

FutureWorks says this decline in free ecological services from rivers will create significant risks to the municipality, to society and to the local economy.

Economic impacts

“Coastal recreational users and property owners will also be affected by changes in (river) water quality and the condition of estuaries and beaches. These are expected to drive significant negative impacts on Durban’s local economy, particularly in relation to coastal tourism.”

Just one example is the filth and sewage that has fouled Durban’s beaches over the past few years and led to several closures of tourist beaches along the city’s Golden Mile.

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Cattle graze in the upstream river catchment areas of the city which are controlled by the Ingonyama Trust. (Image: Sean O’Donoghue)

eThekwini mayor Mxolisi Kaunda says: “Well-managed ecosystems provide over R4-billion worth of services to our city and its residents annually. These waterways are not only responsible for providing water, but they also help regulate the impact of heavy rains and floods if well managed. Therefore, putting the necessary resources into rivers and catchments must be central to the city’s climate adaptation response.”

But to reduce these risks, Durban and other cities will also have to build political support to invest much more money into those less sexy infrastructure projects, such as maintaining and repairing crumbling wastewater treatment works.

The scale of the multidimensional challenge is underlined by the fact that eThekwini is not the only party responsible for restoring the city’s sick rivers.

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A survey of riverside land ownership shows that Ethekwini controls just less than a quarter of this land. Roughly 26% is privately owned and more than half is controlled by the Ingonyama Trust (Imae: Supplied)

A recent assessment of riverside land ownership shows that eThekwini controls just less than a quarter of this land. Roughly 26% is privately owned and more than half is controlled by the Ingonyama Trust — so it’s crucial to build partnerships with the private sector and traditional authorities.

Population pressure
As the population increases in rural and peri-urban settlements, Durban’s rivers will come under further pressure due to more pollution from sewage, litter and higher volumes of stormwater from expanding human settlement.

Several private or community initiatives have made a start already by installing floating litter booms to capture trash before it ends up on the beaches.

Ideally, however, the problem of water-borne litter needs to be tackled at the source by providing dependable refuse removal services and through more vigorous education campaigns to stop rivers from becoming convenient rubbish dumps.

Nomfundo Phewa of the Durban Green Corridors initiative is working with communities around Durban to clear streams of alien invader plants, restore water quality and establish new natural spaces for tourism and recreation (Image: Tony Carnie)
Dr Sean O’Donoghue, senior manager of the city’s Climate Change Adaptation Branch, is confident that the new Transformative River Management Plan has the potential to create thousands of jobs and new sources of income for local communities and private project partners.

Examples include converting alien vegetation into new fibre-based products or bokashi compost.

Mountains of plastic fished out of river courses could also be recycled into a variety of new products, while unemployed communities can benefit by removing alien plants and then replanting or reseeding river courses with indigenous vegetation.

Yet, as Chikoko noted last week: Talk is cheap. Now it’s time for the city to translate its bold commitments and plans into action. DM/OBP


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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Durban’s sewage-fouled beaches closed again after dead fish wash up in Umgeni River

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Several hundred (more likely thousands) of fish and fingerlings have died in the Umgeni River. (Photo: Tony Carnie)

Click on the title to read about the rubbish you can find in the SA rivers and seas 0*\


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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0- 0- A great example of the kind of people chosen to run the country. Imagine if they were all like that O/ O/ :evil:

CENTRAL KAROO

‘Failure of epic proportions’ — lifting the lid on Gayton McKenzie’s flush toilets project

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Shoddy work in replacing the bucket system with flushing toilets in the central Karoo’s Beaufort West — with sewage leaking through cracks and flowing into a nearby river. (Photos: Supplied)


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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Big stink as eThekwini hides its Durban beach water lab results

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Bathers at Wedge Beach, Durban, 3 September. (Photo: Tony Carnie)

By Tony Carnie | 04 Sep 2022

The city’s failure to play open cards threatens to further erode public trust in a beach monitoring system designed to safeguard public health.
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Something stinks on the Durban beachfront — and it’s not just the high sewage pollution levels that have led to the repeated closures of several city beaches over the past eight months.

Our investigations have revealed several curious discrepancies over the past few weeks with the sewage pollution readings posted on public signboards to guide bathers on whether it is safe to swim.

To be charitable, could it be that sloppy officials have simply been a bit slack in updating certain information on the signboards?

Or, is it possible that more senior officials have attempted to downplay the risks that could further damage one of the city’s major tourist attractions in the aftermath of the devastating April floods?

Whatever the cause, however, the city’s failure to explain these apparent inconsistencies — or to play open cards — threatens to further erode public trust in a beach monitoring system designed to safeguard public health.

For several years, the official E. coli (sewage bacteria) contamination levels in Durban’s seawater have been posted on beachfront noticeboards every two weeks for all to see.

Requests ignored

But last week, when Our Burning Planet raised questions and asked the city to release its latest laboratory-certified water quality test results, we ran into a brick wall.

The city’s communications section acknowledged and responded to our written queries, but it simply ignored our request for lab certificates for the central beachfront, which stretches from the Umgeni River mouth to the harbour entrance.

We wanted to compare the lab-certified results (and the test dates) against the information posted on public noticeboards — but the city spurned two opportunities to provide these certificates.

Our request was prompted in part by the recent publication of independent test results from the citizen watchdog group Adopt-a-River and Talbot laboratories, which indicate that (on August 25) all the central beaches had E. coli levels above 500cfu/100 ml. These are levels considered to be “poor/unacceptable” from a recreational and public health perspective in terms of the South African Guidelines for Coastal Marine Waters.

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SA guidelines for coastal recreational water and gastrointestinal risk. (Graphic: Supplied)

We have also received queries from regular beach users, puzzled by discrepancies between E. coli readings posted on eThekwini’s public signboards and the independent Talbot results.

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Talbot central beach results for eThekwini. (Graphic: Supplied)

The Talbot results collected on August 25 suggest E. coli readings ranging between 740 to 2,410cfu along the central beaches (and in the case of Marine Surf/Addington beach, a very high reading of over 21,000cfu.

In contrast, the eThekwini readings displayed on public signboards early last week were generally much lower: Bay of Plenty (52), uShaka (86), Battery (110), Addington/Marine Surf (106), Point (120), North (148) and Country Club (393), with higher readings of 3,873 at Wedge beach and 24,196 at the more remote eThekwini beach near the polluted mouth of the Umgeni River.

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Battery Beach noticeboard readings show widely differing results on 30 August and 1 September. (Photo: Tony Carnie)

Several of these discrepancies can be explained by different collection dates and sampling times, changing tides and currents, varying stormwater flows or other factors such as faecal residue from bathers or dogs defecating on the beach, leading to isolated spikes in E. coli.

Yet the Talbot test results and eThekwini measurements displayed on public signboards vary significantly at several beaches.

In an attempt to clarify some of these discrepancies, we visited several beaches along the central beachfront on 30 August. We also photographed water quality noticeboards between eThekwini beach in the north and uShaka beach in the south. Only Country Club and eThekwini beaches appeared to be closed.

Council test dates vary widely

Although the signboards state that samples are taken every second week, the test dates on display varied widely. Some signs indicated that tests had been done on 30 August. Others had test dates for 28 August or 16 August.

We contacted the city’s designated communications staff and provided them with copies of the latest Talbot test results and asked for:

The city’s comments on the disparate results between Talbot’s higher readings and eThekwini’s lower readings posted on signboards.
Copies of all eThekwini lab results for the two most recent sets of tests along the central beaches.
In its response, the city said: “As recently announced in an urgent public notice, beaches remain closed due to poor water quality. At this point, both our results and the results you shared with us show that the beaches need to remain closed until such a time that test results indicate that the water quality is acceptable.”

Most central beaches still open

But hang on there… Last time we checked, most of the central beaches were still open.

So we wrote back to the city, asking spokesperson Msawakhe Mayisela to clarify whether the city was referring to a newsflash dated 22 August, headlined: “City closes some beaches due to high E. coli levels”?

That alert referred to just 13 of the city’s 25 designated beaches — of which only two are located along the central beachfront. Both of these beaches (eThekwini and Laguna) are located north of the hotel and restaurant belt.

We had also noted during our inspection on 30 August that most of the central beaches were open, with lifeguards on duty and bathing beacons in place. So, had the city now taken a decision to close all of the city’s beaches?

No response to queries

Who knows? We received no response to our request for clarity.

We also asked the city why it was ignoring/refusing our request to provide its latest laboratory-certified water quality test results.

We asked: Is the city trying to hide something? What faith could the public place in the city’s commitment to transparency and safeguarding the health of bathers if it refused to make these results public?

Again, no response (despite our undertaking to hold off publication for another day to allow the city more time to dig out the results and to clarify whether or not it was closing all the city’s beaches).

So, with no answers coming from the city, we went back to the beaches on Saturday afternoon to see what was happening.

Curiously, the public signboards at several beaches had changed.

Test results revised

At five beaches (eThekwini, Country Club, Battery, Bay of Plenty and Wedge), new test dates had been inserted on the signboards, indicating that a further set of test results had been taken on 1 September (just two days after the previously listed 30 August test dates). The test results had also been revised to significantly higher levels.

At uShaka beach, the test readings had also been changed (but not the test date) and an additional warning erected, declaring: “Beach closed. E. coli very high”.

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Ushaka warning sign, Durban, 30 August. (Photo: Tony Carnie)

What is the public to make of these confusing changes? Is it possible that eThekwini ran an additional set of tests on 1 September as a precaution? If so, why just two days after the 30 August test dates displayed at some beaches?

Were junior officials charged with changing the signboards just sloppy — or is there a more disturbing motive to explain significant changes to test dates and test readings at several beaches last week, immediately after we contacted the city to raise queries?

But these mixed messages are nothing new.

Lack of transparency

Earlier this year, we exposed how the city flip-flopped several times on beach closures during the New Year tourist season and reopened beaches when its own lab tests showed high readings at several beaches. Even before the devastation to sewage treatment infrastructure from the floods of April and May, a senior city official also attempted to dismiss visibly stained pulses of dark water pouring out of the Umgeni River mouth as the after-effects of heavy rains and invasive water hyacinth weeds.

The city’s lack of transparency on beach water quality has been further called into question by the recent absence of beach water quality results posted on the city’s website.

Commenting on Sunday, Adopt-a-River founder Janet Simpkins said she found it odd that the city was refusing to release its lab results.

“The public has a right to this information. What are the reasons for not disclosing it?” she asked.

Signs of progress

Thankfully, there may be some bright spots on the horizon.

In its brief response to our queries late last week, the city said that work was under way to repair the Northern Wastewater Treatment Works, a major (but dysfunctional) sewage purification facility that has been dumping untreated sewage into the Umgeni River since at least November 2021.

“The city is working speedily to effect the necessary repairs. The Northern Wastewater Treatment Works has had its power restored and the plant is now energised. We will redirect all the affected sewage water to the plant so we have normal treated water discharge to the affected riverine ecosystem. The Johanna Road pump station has been problematic due to vandalism. This is being addressed speedily.

“Please note that there were 97 pump stations severely damaged during the floods and we have repaired 52 of these stations and the balance will be repaired as well.”

Concern

The opposition Democratic Alliance has also voiced concern about the recent closure of more than 13 beaches due to high E. coli levels.

In a statement on 25 August, Councillor Yogiswarie Govender (DA Member of eThekwini Municipality Executive Committee) said she had written to the city manager, Musa Mbhele, to request the publishing of all water testing results on a weekly basis.

“The closure of the beaches is indeed sounding alarm bells for the future of eThekwini Municipality’s tourism industry, future business attractions and investments. Tourism, one of the few tradable commodities the city has to offer has again been dealt a massive blow.” DM/OBP

This report was compiled with assistance from Roving Reporters.


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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Why can't they be honest and treat the population with respect? 0:


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POISONED WATERS

Government dithers over court or “stern talks” to resolve Durban’s sewage pollution crisis

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From left: Dead fish in the Umgeni River. (Photo: Tony Carnie) | Sewage effluent drains into the Umbilo River. (Photo: Supplied) | Sewage effluent drains into the Umbilo River. (Photo: Supplied)

By Tony Carnie | 18 Sep 2022

A torrent of raw sewage and bacteria from the backsides of well over a million Durban residents is still flowing untreated into local rivers and the sea in the wake of the devastating April/May floods.
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Senior government officials have confirmed that five months down the line, more than 50% of daily sewage flows in a city of well over three million people remain untreated – along with undisclosed volumes of industrial effluent. This has stained the ocean a muddy brown, raising the risk of water-borne disease for ocean users and is slowly poisoning the city’s river and marine food resources.

One of the most damaging impacts has been the repeated closure of several tourist beaches due to high readings of sewage indicator bacteria in the surf. Over the weekend (17 Sept), Durban was forced to shut down several more beaches indefinitely.

But there are other hidden costs as the flow of human poo continues to accumulate in river estuaries, wetlands and along the shoreline.

At a visible level, there have been at least two major fish kills in the Umgeni and Isipingo rivers over the last few weeks that are thought to be linked to a rapid drop in water dissolved oxygen levels. But there could be longer-lasting impacts on the rich and complex sea food chain.

Estuarine expert Nicolette Forbes of the Marine & Estuarine Research consulting group explains that the volume of dissolved oxygen drops sharply in river and estuary water when massive volumes of nutrient-rich organic matter (sewage) start to decay.

Water oxygen levels plummet as bacteria feed on the decaying nutrients. This remains the status quo as the breakdown of organic matter (sewage) continues. As long as there is sewage flowing to the estuaries and coast there will be breakdown and a loss of oxygen in the water.

A secondary effect is the release of nutrients from this decay which results in cyclical algal blooms. The proliferation of algae will cause oxygen levels to rise sharply during the day as algae harvest the energy of the sun into chemical energy via photosynthesis.

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Sea life killed by ‘flip-flopping’ oxygen levels

The dissolved oxygen will then plummet during the night and early hours of the morning. She said this state of regular and extreme “flip-flopping” of oxygen levels not only kills fish, but can also knock out other organisms in the food chain such as crabs, prawns and important estuary creatures.

“Since the flood we have had sustained chronic conditions persisting in the estuaries of excess organic matter and low dissolved oxygen levels which damage the vital fish nursery function of estuaries by disrupting life cycles and possibly wiping out generations of young fish and prawns that would have swum back to repopulate the sea if they had survived.”

Mussels and oysters health risk

Forbes said she was also concerned about the potential health risk to people harvesting filter-feeders such as mussels and oysters, which can bioaccumulate disease-causing pathogens from sewage and poisonous heavy metals from industrial effluent.

While estuaries would very likely recover over the long term, once effluent flows reduced, the short and medium-term impacts on local food chains were less clear because of the “unprecedented” nutrient flows.

The eThekwini municipality has argued that it is hamstrung financially as it grapples to access disaster relief funds or reprioritise existing budgets to restore drinking water to several areas; to repair critical infrastructure and also meet the immediate social needs of those displaced by the floods.

Nevertheless, the national custodian of the country’s fresh water resources has now voiced concern over the slow pace of repairing Durban’s battered wastewater treatment facilities.

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Effluent pours from a broken sewer line in Riverhorse Valley in Durban on 12 May. This pipeline has now been repaired. (Photo: Supplied)

In normal times, sewage and industrial effluent in the northern parts of the city is collected through a vast network of pipelines for filtering and decontamination at several treatment plants. It is then released back into rivers and the sea after being semi-purified. In other parts of the city, the normal treatment process is more rudimentary, as large volumes of effluent are pumped directly into the sea via two sea outfall pipes at distances of between three and four km offshore.

But most of this treatment has been largely absent since April – and in some cases, well before the floods – due to major damage to conveyance pipes, treatment plants and pump stations across the city.

At an informal media “networking session” in Durban on 16 September, senior officials of the Department of Water and Sanitation confirmed that more than half the city’s wastewater flows are still running directly into local rivers, and then into the sea.

R651m infrastructure repair bill

Ashley Starkey, provincial head of the national Department of Water and Sanitation, said the repair bill had been estimated at around R651-million.

Angela Masefield, the department’s regional director (regulation) said eThekwini’s repair programme had focused mainly on restoring tap water to local residents but “the sewage side has been slower”.

She noted that more than 100 sewage pumping stations had been damaged during the floods and repair work by the municipality had achieved about 50% progress.

She said the Northern Waste Water Treatment Works, which pretreats sewage flowing into the Umgeni River, was not operational, noting that: “Progress is not fast enough and we have requested action plans from eThekwini.”

Siyabonga Buthelezi, an aquatic scientist and water quality manager, said his department had decided to “take some steps” to compel eThekwini to resolve the treatment failures more rapidly.

Buthelezi was reluctant to disclose the exact nature of these steps, but confirmed that his department had already served a formal directive (administrative warning) on the city.

Pressed on whether the department was considering a criminal prosecution of the city in terms of the National Water Act, Buthelezi said: “It is a process. We have suggested something to our legal section, or it could involve the Minister (Senzo Mchunu) talking directly to the Municipal Manager or the Premier.

“But yes, five months down the line, not much has been done. Hence we have made a recommendation to our legal guys … The (aquatic) system can only take so much (prolonged sewage input) and in some cases there may be other chemicals.”

Legal action not ruled out

Sputnik Ratau, spokesperson for the national water and sanitation department, said the three tiers of government were committed to the principles of cooperative governance, but the possibility of legal action could not be ruled out.

During a hearing of the SA Human Rights Commission in Durban last month, senior city officials said the municipality needed to spend more than R20-billion within the next 10 years to ensure that its water and wastewater systems could support an increasing population – but there was no money to do this, they said.

Last week the city also issued a statement that it was “hard at work to ensure that flood damage to infrastructure is repaired as speedily as possible”.

“The City would like to assure members of the public that the 13 beaches that were opened over the weekend remain open. They will remain open until results from eThekwini’s accredited laboratory indicate that a different decision needs to be taken.

Tourist beaches closed

But on September 17 it announced further closures with immediate effect after the latest round of testing – including most of its popular central beaches.

“The following beaches are closed: Brighton, Ansteys, Point, Ushaka, Addington, South, Wedge, North, Bay of Plenty, Battery, Country Club, Thekwini, Laguna, Baggies and Reunion beaches.”

Umhlanga main beach, Umdloti, Westbrooke and Bronze beaches also remain closed.

“Beaches that remain open include Toti, Pipeline, Warner, Winklespruit and Umgababa beaches.”

In a previous statement the city said it would increase the frequency of testing at bathing beaches and pledged to “publicly share these results as expected”.

Curiously, however, the city is stalling on our request for copies of laboratory-accredited results of recent beach water testing. Our Burning Planet has now lodged a formal application for these results in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act. DM/OBP


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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:evil: Government at its best :evil:


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Durban pledges ‘aggressive plan’ to clean up beach sewage pollution crisis before Christmas holidays

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Dead fish in the polluted Umgeni River. (Photo: Steve Cohen)

By Tony Carnie | 06 Oct 2022

Worried by the threat to the beachfront tourism and hospitality industry, Durban municipal leaders say they have re-prioritised the city’s budget to start cleaning up sewage-fouled beaches in time for the December holiday season. The city is also appealing to the private sector to support its efforts.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Ethekwini Metro Mayor Mxolisi Kaunda — flanked by three senior representatives of the Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry — apologised again for the recent spate of beach closures largely caused by massive volumes of untreated human sewage in the wake of the April and May floods.

At a joint media briefing by the eThekwini municipality and Durban’s business chamber leaders on 6 October, Kaunda and city manager Musa Mbhele said recent tests suggested that water quality was improving at some of the central and southern beaches — but major expenditure and a “total overhaul” of the city’s wastewater treatment infrastructure was needed.

“From the outset, we acknowledge the frustration and inconvenience that the closure of beaches has caused the public and the business community and we apologise unreservedly. Beaches are a major tourist drawcard in Durban and their closure is disappointing to locals and visitors alike.

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Ethekwini city manager Musa Mbhele. (Photo: Thuli Dlamini)

“However, the safety of the public is paramount, which is why we are testing our water regularly to ascertain its quality (see footnote).”

Kaunda said some of the work needed to repair damaged sanitation infrastructure would start shortly, following the recent allocation of disaster relief funding from the National Treasury.

“While most welcome, this funding of R184-million is inadequate, so we have reprioritised our budget to fast-track these much-needed repairs. The estimated cost of the repairs is R160-million for pump stations and over R300-million for water treatment works,” he said.

“It is our fervent hope that these all-important repairs will ensure that our beaches are not contaminated so that they can remain open throughout the festive season.”

Funding uncertainty

However, it remains unclear to what extent the new Treasury funding and the city’s “aggressive reprioritisation” of its own budget will alleviate the extent of pollution of local rivers and the sea. This is because the R184-million from Treasury comes in the form of a conditional grant, so large chunks are expected to be allocated to other urgent infrastructure repairs such as roads and bridges.

At another recent briefing in Durban, regional representatives of the national Department of Water and Sanitation estimated that eThekwini needed close to R1-billion to repair water-related infrastructure (roughly R300-million for potable water and a further R600-million for sanitation/wastewater).

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The Northern Wastewater Treatment Works in Durban. (Photo: Shawn Herbst)

Even before the April floods, sewage leaks and overflows into local river systems had become a regular feature due to the collapse or neglect of facilities such as the Northern Wastewater Treatment Works on the banks of the Umgeni River, which enters the sea close to several tourist beaches.

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The red dots indicate Durban treatment works in late September 2022 where just 0%-40% of sewage flows are being treated. Yellow dots show where 41%-80% of sewage is being treated and the smaller green dots indicate where 81-100% is being treated. (Graphic: Supplied)

According to a graphic released late last month, several of the largest sewage treatment plants are treating just 0% to 40% of sewage flows generated by the city’s residents, which means massive volumes of untreated sewage are still flowing straight into rivers and the sea.

In response to questions from Our Burning Planet on 6 October, Mbhele acknowledged that “the budget is never enough — so there is a need for novel measures”.

He said that with assistance from the Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry (DCCI), the city was also engaging with the Office of the Presidency and he was hopeful that “there is definitely going to be more financial support”.

Private sector

Mbhele said the city was inviting the private sector to lend a hand, and eThekwini hoped to release further details of a range of intervention plans “in the near future, once they are finalised”.

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Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry CEO Palesa Phili. (Photo: Thuli Dlamini)

Significantly, the mayor and city manager were joined at the media briefing by DCCI chief executive, Phalesa Phili, chamber president Prasheen Maharaj and Samantha Croft, who chairs the chamber’s tourism forum.

Croft, who is also regional director of operations for the Tsogo Sun Hotels group — which owns the Maharani/Elangeni and other beachfront and Umhlanga hotels — said:

“We can sit and complain, or bat together. So we have opted to work together… We are working behind the scenes to get the beaches open so that we can encourage tourists to come to Durban for the Christmas season.”

In response to a question on whether the hospitality sector was suffering from cancelled bookings, Croft said there was no doubt that the closure of beaches had impacted the tourism sector negatively, but she suggested it was too early to say whether there had been a decline in Christmas season bookings.

Chamber president Maharaj and CEO Phili reiterated the message that the hospitality and tourism sector needed to get involved in solving the problems.

“The city is facing an existential crisis and we can’t sit on the sidelines. So we have decided to throw the weight of business and capital behind the city to avert an economic crisis… We have to be part of the solution,” said Maharaj in reference not just to the beach closures, but also to the repair of other flood-damaged infrastructure, power outages, illegal trading, enforcement of by-laws and “crime-and-grime” issues around the city.

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Durban Chamber of Commerce and Industry president Prasheen Maharaj. (Photo: Thuli Dlamini)

While “complaining and fighting government was not the solution”, the chamber would nevertheless press all three levels of government to keep the promises they made, Maharaj said.

The city has, meanwhile, announced that it is reopening at least four central beaches for bathing (Bay of Plenty, uShaka, North and Wedge beaches) and four southern beaches (Umgababa, Umkhomazi, Brighton and Treasure).

Kaunda has declared that “Durban is open for business and for tourists”, but the proof will be in the pudding. DM

Following the city’s recent refusal to provide Our Burning Planet with laboratory-certified results of recent beach water quality tests, we have now obtained some of these results following a formal application in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act. We are now waiting for the city to explain several discrepancies and anomalies between the lab results and the E. coli (sewage pollution) readings displayed on public information signboards on the Durban beachfront.


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

Post by Richprins »

This was on Carte Blanche last night, and the neglect began long before the floods! :evil:


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Re: The State of The Rivers/Oceans/Water

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River roadblocks — South Africa’s waterways need help to be brought back to life

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Rudimentary and poorly designed river crossings and culverts are often blocked with plastic and other waste, hindering fish movement. (Photo: Nolwazi Ngcobo /UKZN)

By Tony Carnie | 10 Nov 2022

Stained and depleted by the time they reach the coast, many rivers are in trouble. It’s not just sewage, plastic or industrial pollution. A multitude of man-made ‘roadblocks’ are restricting or completely stopping fish and other freshwater life from moving freely to breed and survive.
________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Far from being rivers of life, many of South Africa’s freshwater systems are becoming rivers of death – mere channels from which water is extracted, or used as a dumping ground for human and industrial effluent.

The problems of excessive water extraction and pollution of local rivers are relatively well known.

But there is another critical threat to river life that has received far less attention: the steady proliferation of man-made obstacles such as dams, weirs, culverts or river crossings that create physical barriers to the vital movements of fish and other aquatic life.

Much like birds and several animals, fish also need to move or migrate for a variety of reasons.

During the cold winter months, some species need to move into deeper, warmer water to survive sudden temperature shocks. When oxygen levels in the water drop suddenly because of rotting effluent, or when chemicals pollute their living environment, fish need an escape route to cleaner water.

And critically, many local fish species also need to migrate within a river system or into the sea (or vice versa) to complete their complex biological life cycles.

Several species live entirely within freshwater, but many others depend partly or entirely on the ocean to complete their life cycles.

Catadromous fishes (like freshwater eels) are born in the ocean, but they feed and grow in fresh waters or estuaries before returning to the sea many years later to breed.

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The life cycle of several fish species such as the river bream depend on access to both fresh water and sea water. (Photo: Matthew Burnett/UKZN)

Towering concrete barrier traps
Now, however, many of these fish are increasingly trapped by a multitude of towering concrete barriers that have confined them into degraded living spaces that become inexorably smaller each year.

Dr Gordon O’Brien, an aquatic ecologist and senior lecturer at the University of Mpumalanga, reports that there are now more than 4,000 formal dams with impoundments and another 1,400 gauging weirs spread across rivers nationwide that form “partial, temporary or complete barriers to fish migration”.

Yet, there are only about 60 engineered fish-passageways across the country, and it remains unclear how well these structures are working.

This comes at a time when new dams or weirs are being planned on several of the last, largely free-flowing rivers in South Africa to store more water, including the Limpopo, Crocodile, Thukela, Umkomaas, Mzimkulu and Mzimvubu. None of these new structures will be legally obliged to incorporate fish pass structures.

Is there a solution to these problems?

“Yes,” suggests Dr Matthew Burnett, a post-doctoral researcher at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (UKZN) School of Life Sciences and senior scientist with the “Rivers of Life” aquatic health research group in Pietermaritzburg.

He is also closely involved in using fish telemetry to monitor the effectiveness of fishways and fish ladders – specially designed structures that have been fitted to several dams and other riverine obstacles across the world to give fish a fighting chance at migration or movement along obstructed river courses.

Earlier this month, at The Conservation Symposium 2022 in Scottburgh, Burnett chaired a special session on the numerous threats to local freshwater ecosystems entitled “Out of Sight, Out of Mind: The Fish Below the Surface”.

The session featured presentations by several aquatic researchers on the restrictions to movement in freshwater ecosystems in south and east Africa.

One such project, involving UKZN masters student Bradley van Zyl, is focused on the Lower Thukela Bulk Water Supply Scheme, which incorporates a 9m high concrete weir about 20km upstream of the Thukela River mouth. It’s the largest river in KZN and the second largest in the country.

Burnett notes that while the Lower Thukela weir incorporates an artificial fishway and rock ramp, it is still not clear whether these structures are working effectively to enable the movement of fish, and other aquatic life such as freshwater prawns or swimming (varuna) crabs.

In some senses, finding the entrance to the Thukela fishway is a bit like looking for a needle in a haystack, considering that the entrance is just 1m wide, whereas the weir is 100m wide. There is also a rock ramp that provides another 2m of width for fish movement.

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Dr Matthew Burnett with a KZN yellowfish caught in the Dusi River near Pietermaritzburg. (Photo: Matthew Burnett/UKZN)

“One of the questions we are looking at is whether existing fishways or fishway design in South Africa can be improved for different local species, as most of these designs are adapted from salmon passages in Europe and North America,” Burnett told Our Burning Planet.

“What we are finding is that it’s hard to distinguish whether the fishway on the Thukela is working, or whether the abundance of fish is low because of multiple stressors, including effluent discharges from the Sappi pulp mill or the Mandeni industrial area.”

In other words, is poor passage design responsible for the low numbers of river creatures using the fishway and rock ramp? Or is pollution and reduced water flow driving down fish numbers in the lower reaches of the Thukela?

Van Zyl notes that up to 55Ml of water is abstracted daily from the Lower Thukela weir and there are plans to double this abstraction volume to 110Ml.

In such conditions, where fish abundance already seems to be declining, it is essential to ensure a guaranteed level of water for the environmental health of river life and for the dilution of industrial and domestic effluent.

On paper, the National Water Act makes provision for a minimum guaranteed water flow or “ecological reserve” to ensure the wellbeing of freshwater and the marine environment – but it remains unclear whether this reserve determination is implemented and enforced for all rivers.

“Getting the balance right between people’s needs and the environment’s needs will be challenging,” he says, noting that the Thukela is a perennial river whose mouth should remain open year-round – yet it was closed for two months last year.

“Its closure is almost unheard of, but sadly becoming a reality.”

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Researchers Bradley van Zyl and Nolwazi Ngcobo with a marmorata eel caught in the Bushmens River, KZN. (Photo: Matthew Burnett /UKZN)

Freshwater eels

Over recent years, UKZN researchers have also been studying several life forms along the river – including the remarkable sea-to-river and river-to-sea movements of four freshwater (anguillid) eel species.

“Most people don’t realise that eels can move up to 2,000km to complete their life cycles – and some of these eels move all the way up to the Thukela Falls in the Drakensberg mountain range. We have caught some monster-size eels in the Thukela,” he said.

Several of these eels are already in trouble, according to recent studies by former UKZN researcher Dr Céline Hanzen.

In a research paper published earlier this year, Hanzen and her colleagues noted that the range of four freshwater eel species found in KZN rivers has declined by between 35% and 82% since the 1950s. She also warned that two of these species may be extirpated from the country in coming decades.

This is despite the fact that eels are remarkable climbers, with records of an African mottled eel being found 320km inland. During the 1960s, some eel species (such as the African longfin eel) were recorded at 1,670m above sea level in the Mzimkhulu River and in the Ncandu River, about 500km from the sea in the Thukela catchment.

Freshwater eels are not the only species in trouble.

Burnett is also worried about the red-tailed barb, a small fish species once common in KZN rivers but now classified as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.

Study of fish life
There is similar concern around the future of the indigenous yellowfish species in several local rivers.

This is one of the reasons why UKZN masters student Nolwazi Ngcobo is studying obstacles along the Msunduzi (Dusi) River system near Pietermaritzburg.

Ngcobo’s study of fish life in the Dusi is focused on the extent to which artificial barriers such as bridges and culverts (along with accumulations of plastic and other solid waste) prevent or restrict migration by fish and other freshwater species at six sites along this river system.

Burnett explained that the Camps Drift paddler ramp incorporates a fishway, but it’s still unclear how effective it is to facilitate fish movement.

The Dusi has also been in the news over recent years because of regular sewage spills from the Darvill wastewater treatment works and a devastating spill of vegetable oil and caustic soda from the Willowton Oil factory in August 2019. Fish, crabs and invertebrate life were all but wiped out from a 40km river stretch.

Burnett says that regardless of whether water quality improves or deteriorates in the coming years, fish will still need to move.

“When there are high levels of pollution, fish cannot escape or recolonise impacted areas – because they cannot move.”

In a paper published last year, Burnett and colleagues studied movements of KZN yellowfish along the Umgeni River between Midmar and Albert Falls Dams, and found that these fish deliberately seek out deeper, warmer river habitats when winter temperatures drop below a certain threshold.

Yet in the summer months, they also need to move up or downstream in search of food or unique spots to spawn.

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This sloping rockway on the Lower Tugela River weir was designed to help fish, crabs and other freshwater species to move upstream. (Photo: Bradley van Zyl/UKZN)

Removing river obstacles
According to Burnett, this growing global appreciation of the needs of fish gave rise to organisations such as the World Fish Migration Foundation, which is trying to remove river obstacles across the world.

So why aren’t there more fishways or fish ladders in South Africa’s rivers? And are there ways to design better road crossings, culverts and other river obstacles?

“We are often told that it costs too much. But one of the questions we need to be asking is: What barriers are there that don’t need to be there anymore? And what are the long-term costs for fish and the people who depend on fish?” Burnett asks.

Along the Dusi/Umgeni River system, there are currently no fishways or ladders on most of the constructed dams such as Inanda, Midmar, Albert Falls, Nagle or Henley.

While it seems highly unlikely that any of these dams will ever be demolished to restore fish migration paths, Burnett says there are some easy fixes available to retrofit fish ladders to some dams, or to replace smaller obstacles through better design.

One of the aims of Ngcobo’s study is to quantify the number and location of barriers in the Dusi, and also to examine whether it is possible to upgrade road crossings to cater for fish migration.

Burnett and his colleagues also point to the emerging risks that have become apparent on dry land, where wild animals isolated in relatively small game and nature reserves can suffer from genetic inbreeding depression because they can no longer migrate to ensure richer and more varied gene flows.

The same risks apply to fish. Over the long term – unless fish can move – their genetic richness and ultimate survival in several rivers remains in question, he warns. DM/OBP.


"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world." Nelson Mandela
The desire for equality must never exceed the demands of knowledge
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