Kakamas residents live on the edge of a water emergency
The town’s only water treatment plant is near collapse
- The Kai !Garib Municipality says the Kakamas water treatment plant “may fail at any time”.
- Residents report frequent outages and say when the water comes out of their taps it often has red worms, sticks and dirt.
- The treatment plant is beyond its intended lifespan, understaffed, lacks basic equipment, and chlorine is still mixed by hand into the supply.
- The municipal infrastructure grant is “too small to address this emergency situation” and the national Department of Water and Sanitation says it is funding emergency repairs.
People in the small town of Kakamas on the banks of the Orange River, 80km west of Upington in the Northern Cape, live with failing water treatment infrastructure, frequent water outages and dirty tap water.
They say that when water does come out of their taps, it often has dirt and sticks, and according to Leonard McKay, a community leader and activist, sometimes red worms.
Ernestine Isaaks said that in the summer months, when temperatures reach 40ºC, they get dirty water and frequent water interruptions.
“This time of the year we will get our red worms. We will get it,” said Isaaks.
Frequent posts on social media have shown photos and videos of worms in people’s water. These could be bloodworms which are harmless but indicate that something is wrong with the water supply.
The local water treatment plant is noticeably deteriorating. Some equipment is not functioning at all. The facility is understaffed. Workers lack tools. Chlorine is still mixed into the drinking water by hand. The chemical had not been delivered for days when we visited.
McKay said the dirty water is especially worrying because children “don’t look” and “just drink” from the tap.
Hildegard De Wee said her household hasn’t been drinking the water as they frequently get “sticks” and “black and brown stuff” coming out of the tap. It’s been an issue for about five years now, she said. Every second or third day, they buy 20 litres of water.
Many residents cannot afford to buy water every few days.
McKay is worried that the Kai !Garib Municipality has no contingency plan if the treatment plant fails. “We will sit without water for months,” said McKay.
People then have to queue at public water tanks.
The Kai !Garib Municipality stated in its 2023 that the Kakamas water treatment plant “may fail at any time and this will have devastating results to the community and the municipality”.
It said, “This particular plant is below the flood line and beyond its life span, which poses great challenges.”
The municipality said the cost of establishing a new plant is about R80-million, and its municipal infrastructure grant is “too small to address this emergency situation”.
The report said the plant cannot meet the daily demand. Most of the mechanical equipment is in a “poor state” and beyond its lifespan. Filters are in a bad condition, which accounts for the bad water quality. The dosing equipment is also in poor condition”.
The national water department confirmed that the Kakamas treatment works’ “mechanical, electrical and dosing equipment has reached the end of its serviceable lifetime”. The equipment at the plant is now about 37 years old.
Kai !Garib’s latest municipal Blue Drop Score from the Department of Water and Sanitation, released in 2023, was just 16%, far below the minimum target of 31%. The Kakamas Blue Drop Score was 23%.
All 16 of the water supply systems in the municipality were reported to be in a critical state.
Spokesperson for the national water department Wisane Mavasa said that it has tried to force the municipality to improve both its Blue and Green Drop scores, and for the municipality to “supply safe drinking water”. There has been some improvement in the volume of supply and quality of drinking water, said Mavasa.
But the aging water treatment plant requires long-term upgrades and needs to be almost entirely replaced. There also needs to be a new river pump station and a new bulk water supply pipeline and reservoirs for future extension of the town.
The department is funding an “emergency refurbishment” to improve water reliability and quality in the short-term, before long-term upgrades are finalised.
The municipality did not respond to our questions.
Letters
Dear Editor
The article on Kakamas’ water crisis paints a tragic picture of a community grappling with the consequences of systemic neglect and mismanagement. Yet, at its heart lies a harsh truth: the leaders we elect are the architects of the governance we endure.
When municipalities like Kai !Garib fail, it’s not only a reflection of inadequate leadership but also a mirror of the choices made by the electorate. Poor governance often stems from repeated cycles of loyalty to parties or individuals who have demonstrated their inability (or unwillingness) to deliver basic services. In such cases, the community becomes complicit in perpetuating its own suffering by continually empowering those who fail them.
This is not to victim-blame the residents of Kakamas, many of whom are likely disillusioned, disempowered, or constrained by political realities that leave them feeling as though there are no viable alternatives. However, democracy demands vigilance. It demands that we hold our leaders accountable, demand transparency, and refuse to accept mediocrity as the norm. Voting isn’t just a right; it’s a responsibility.
The failure of infrastructure across the country like the water treatment plant in Kakamas isn’t just about mechanical and chemical systems reaching the end of their lifespan, it’s about a political system that has done the same. A municipal Blue Drop Score of 16% is not merely a statistic, it’s a symbol of the lives endangered by dirty water, the children exposed to harmful contaminants, and the erosion of trust in government.
The people of Kakamas deserve clean water, but they also deserve leadership that values their health and dignity enough to prioritise these essential services. The time has come for citizens across the country to vote with their values, their needs, and their futures in mind. If the current leadership cannot deliver, it must be replaced. Complacency in governance is deadly, so too is complacency in the voting booth. 2026 is around the corner.
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