The latest official dam level stats for the Western Cape show that cumulatively the six major dams in the province have dipped below 80% of capacity.
The six major dams in the Western Cape – the Berg River, Steenbras Lower, Steenberg Upper, Theewaterskloof, Voelvlei and Wemmershoek – all saw significant increases during last winter.
However, as the summer season continues, those levels have predictably dropped significantly.
There is a sprinkling of rain forecast for parts of the Western Cape in the coming days, but nothing that will result in a rise in the dam levels.
Up on last year
The City of Cape Town uploaded its latest stats on Wednesday, 5 February.
The latest figures show the six dams are a combined 79.4% of total storage.
That’s down from the 81.9% the previous week.
The current levels are, however, marginally up on the same period a year ago when the combined percentage stood at 79%.
Theewaterskloof, which accounts for more than 50% of the province’s total dam capacity (480 188 MI of a total of 898 221 MI) is at 79.5% of capacity, while the next biggest dam, Voëlvlei (164 095 MI), is at 78.9%.
Western Cape residents need no reminding of life during the ‘Day Zero’ water crisis from mid-2017 to mid-2018.
Follow The South African website for the latest dam level news in the Western Cape
WESTERN CAPE DAM LEVELS
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