Disaster As Harare Water Runs Out Of Chemicals
19 December 2018
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Correspondent|HARARE Mayor Councillor Herbert Gomba has announced that the Harare City Council has run out of water treatment chemicals.

The Mayor revealed the shocking details at a press conference on Wednesday.

The city has been going for long periods of the day with no water during the last few weeks.

The mayor revealed that The Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe has released only US$1.2 million towards the procurement of critical water treatment chemicals when the City requires between US$2.5 – US$2.8 million every month.

The city has run out of aluminium sulphate and HTH. Local authorities countrywide are battling to procure water purification chemicals as local suppliers are demanding payment in foreign currency, Urban Councils’ Association of Zimbabwe president Josiah Makombe revealed.

“Local authorities have been facing a challenge in sourcing water treatment chemicals because suppliers are charging in foreign currency, yet councils do not have that kind of money,” Makombe said.

“What it entails is that because local authorities do not have adequate supplies of foreign currency, they have reduced quantities they buy from local suppliers, but I still have to check with my secretary-general to get full details on the actual state of supplies (water treatment chemicals) in the market.”

Harare City Council’s acting director for water, Mabhena Moyo said the local authority had engaged the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe (RBZ) for forex to procure chemicals as all local suppliers had nothing in stock.

“We have reduced the water we are treating because we don’t have chemicals. We have engaged the RBZ but we are yet to get a favourable response. We checked with all our suppliers locally, we don’t have sulphuric acid and we hope that the central bank will help very fast,” Moyo said.

The situation is dire and exposes residents to waterborne diseases.

Already Harare is battling to meet water demand as it pumps 420 mega litres per day against the required 1 000 mega litres.

Last month, there were reports that Bulawayo had run out of the water treatment chemicals with fears that the local authority could be forced to stop the purification of the precious liquid due to foreign currency shortages.