Residents are now being asked to curb the amount of municipal water they use each day to just 50 liters (a little over 13 gallons). Only a month ago, level six restrictions had placed residents on a daily allowance of 87 liters (about 23 gallons), illustrating the severity of the looming crisis.
Experts are keeping a close eye on daily consumption in a desperate bid to avoid the disaster, warning residents tempted to ignore measures that they face fines and the installation of water-management meters if they do not comply.
It may seem unthinkable that a developed city of four million could run out of water but it’s been a slow-burning catastrophe exacerbated by some uncontrollable factors.
The city is now working to upgrade its water systems — rushing to build desalination, aquifer and water-recycling projects — and help stretch the current supply, but officials say residents need to step up, too.
Residents already feeling impact
Capetonians immediately felt the latest measures take effect Thursday. Uyanda Precious Purple Mchunu lives in Long Street in the heart of Cape Town. She told CNN she woke up with no water in her apartment and was late to work.
“We got no update about not having water at all. I woke up at 5:00 a.m (10:00 p.m. ET Wednesday) to shower and (not a) drop came out. I am very upset about the situation,” she said.
“I feel like I need to get 20 liters so I can store water. But guess what: we don’t even have a schedule in terms of when will water come and when will it be off so we can be prepared. Nothing.”
Mchunu, who works for Intellicell, a telecommunications company in Cape Town, added that she couldn’t cook yesterday but today it’s worse.
“We can’t flush the toilet and (we’re) running out of water to drink. Buying water is very expensive, I must say,” she added.
Apprehension at unknown grows
As the countdown inches closer, residents have been growing increasingly anxious, with many stockpiling water and installing tanks at their properties.
Amanda Stergianos, a blogger who lives in Cape Town’s southern suburb of Meadowridge, documented how this latest round of restrictions has affected residents while she was out and about on Thursday.
“I decide to go to the local spring at 6:00 a.m (11:00 p.m. ET Wednesday) to hopefully avoid the queues, and it was just so surreal,” Stergianos told CNN. “It was humming with activity.”
Stergianos witnessed elderly people who said they were struggling to carry the water tanks, adding there’s been a “total lack of forward planning for those who can’t collect water.”
“I am strong and healthy, but also a single parent. Carrying 25 liters (about 6.6 gallons) of water is nearly impossible for me for more than five meters without setting it down — let alone for long walks from the springs to the cars,” she said.
“At collection points, no portage is available, no shade — what about all the elderly? At some points, you may not fill more than one container, meaning if I collect for my household, then collect for my elderly father, I must go back to the back of the queue for another few hours again,” she continued.
Another Capetonian, Adele van der Spuy, relayed the daily struggle of so many in a video filmed outside a Makro wholesale warehouse in Cape Town last Friday.
“People were already rushing in and out of the shop to buy water,” van der Spuy told CNN. “Some actually went in several times as we were only allowed to buy five boxes at a time.”
Van der Spuy, a casino worker, described the scene as something she had “never witnessed before.”
“It is eye opening and an indication of the panic and also what lies ahead,” she continued.
“People are queuing in long lines to buy water. Some shops have been sold out for a few days now. It seems like you have to be at the shop as soon as they open in order to get water,” van der Spuy added.
What happens if Day Zero comes?
Should the government declare Day Zero has arrived, faucets will cease to deliver water to the parched city until the skies open and rain falls.
On this day, residents will be further rationed to just 25 liters (6.6 gallons), which they will be able to collect only from one of 200 stations. To put that into perspective, each collection point will have to accommodate the water needs of 20,000 Capetonians.
But questions dominate everyday conversation around the city’s wider strategy for the general population, which authorities are yet to publicly outline. Given this stark outlook, there are concerns neighbors could turn on each other and fears of unrest erupting the longer the crisis continues.
CNN’s Emily Smith and Paul Murphy contributed to this report.
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