Two political parties utilizing a disaster to blame each other rather than come together to end the suffering of the people they govern… What a novel concept
@zenoblues77872 жыл бұрын
When I was younger I thought governments around the world would unite and create a future like Star Trek. Now I think something like Battletech or Warhammer 40k is more realistic.
@MrAsianPie2 жыл бұрын
Nope, never heard of it, ever
@buttorr2 жыл бұрын
reminds me of good ol murica
@deafiefox2 жыл бұрын
Sounds horribly familiar…
@Jaysin4122 жыл бұрын
Sounds like most countries governments...
@CaraTheStrange2 жыл бұрын
I remember all those “day 0” warnings, the water saving habits we learnt in 2018 are hard to unlearn, like not flushing if its just pee. I was in a boarding school and we used massive buckets to catch shower water and flush the toilets with that water.
@nessesitoburrito88732 жыл бұрын
If it’s yellow let it mellow if it’s brown flush it down. Unless it’s dark yellow flush that shit down. I’m a penny pincher water savings kind of guy and I live in America. Use less Payless.
@benjespina2 жыл бұрын
Was a tourist back in Feb 2018. washing ourselves on top of a bucket so we could use it to flush later was an experience. Glad that it got resolved and it didnt go worse.
@benjaminbrett11672 жыл бұрын
I still do that shower thing too!
@Bullshitvol22 жыл бұрын
you can do that in an emergency, but after a while the ammonia in urine will destroy the wastewater pipes. Thats the reason why it is nonsenical to save water in europe. The more people are saving water the more water needs to be used by the wastewater treatment plant to regulary flush the pipes.
@Wither50002 жыл бұрын
@@benjespina damn, should've came to Durban.
@capetownwild2 жыл бұрын
Lived in Cape Town my whole life and it was quite the thing to live through. It got really tight in the end. Strict rationing and penalties handed out. A lot of the taps you see people filling up their large water containers is mountain/spring water and those springs are scattered around Table Mountain. They all had queues for the first time I had ever seen. There are also water tunnels under town that funnel water from Table Mountain., under town and into the ocean but not used as such for water consumption. There were lots of ideas and solutions at the time but as the rains have come back, peoples memory wanes and life threatening drought gets replaced by a COVID shut down.
@everyone1liesd4592 жыл бұрын
Now you know To always have 5-6 2 liter bottles of water Especially since you live in the desert Never trust the government to fix things quickly
@Mark-vn7et2 жыл бұрын
So you mean it’s like in most African countries, what happened in the past is the past and they go to sleep and reset their brain like nothing ever happened……..until the next catastrofe and again they will expect the western worlds to solve it for them.
@admiralkaede2 жыл бұрын
may i ask why they were not used?
@capetownwild2 жыл бұрын
@@admiralkaede the volume of water doesn't justify the cost of the infrastructure project it would entail. Easier/cheaper to get it from the big dams (when there isn't a drought!). And at the time, it would have been difficult to harvest any large volumes of water from the tunnels. Its a pity, as its really good mountain water. But the general population was still using Table Mountain spring water as could be seen in the video. EDIT: I see from another article that the city has incorporated 15m liters of ground water from TM into its daily supply
@otm6462 жыл бұрын
Was there any attempt to bring in emergency desalination?
@sanji21582 жыл бұрын
around 18 years ago there was a drought in europe, and our elementary school teacher told us that we had to learn how to use less water, and not let the water run while brushing teeth etc. to this day i admire him for trying to teach us kids from Bergen, Norway a town with more than 200 days of rain a year how to conserve water.
@013aanikhfds2 жыл бұрын
Bergen getting 75 inches a year is a moderate drought
@Alsoknownazz2 жыл бұрын
Never understood why people would let the water run while brushing teeth. Even if it would rain non stop.
@s0nnyburnett2 жыл бұрын
Personal usage even in excess is insignificant compared to commercial and that goes for a lot of thing beyond water. All that guilt doesn't make a real difference.
@ABC-ABC12342 жыл бұрын
Norway is one of the country that is blessed with insane water reservoirs, on top of the rainfall received the whole land is a big fresh water tank with all these fjords and water falls. Downside is the horrible lack of sunlight and depressing weather...
@bonevtik-c6d2 жыл бұрын
That year there was a severe drought in the Crimea , because the puppet government of Ukraine , with the support of Western countries , staged a water blockade , millions of people needed water , the earth suffered because they drilled wells to get water ! The hypocritical world community did not notice the problem
@Lankyblankman2 жыл бұрын
I live in Port Elizabeth, South Africa. Our 'day zero' is a looming threat in all our minds, only ever being delayed by some small rainfall this very warm and dry winter. We never know if next week the taps will be shut off. We've been experiencing drought for nearly the last 9 years, and little has been done. This is the ANC's South Africa.
@013aanikhfds2 жыл бұрын
American here. Why do you think the ANC is doing nothing about water scarcity?
@Lankyblankman2 жыл бұрын
@@013aanikhfds Because it is not in their interest to govern but rather to enrich themselves and their family members. It might seem in scenarios like this that there are some sinister motives behind such inaction, but it is largely just accepted that it is incompetence. (Not saying there couldn't be such ulterior motives, just that it is not commonly assumed)
@jakefarrell70312 жыл бұрын
@@013aanikhfds qa😊😊a
@MightyCats20112 жыл бұрын
Australia is a dry continent too. The solution is apart from saving water and water restrictions like no watering garden. Its to build desalination plants and convert sea water to drinking water.
@moodapenkinislazy Жыл бұрын
@@Lankyblankman least corrupt South African politician
@gabrielfraser21092 жыл бұрын
I should emphasize, although the Western Cape Province is run by the DA, while the national government is run by the ANC, this isn't quite comparable to the US, where Texas is run by one party, while the federal government is run by another. Our provincial governments have very little power to make their own laws or pursue their own policy - their job is primarily administration.
@ariyune70072 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a nightmare if you want more autonomy locally
@frederickvonabel63492 жыл бұрын
@@ariyune7007 Oh trust me it is
@davidcopeland54502 жыл бұрын
It doesn’t help when the ANC is so corrupt and deeply lined with shady money in their own pockets that they seem largely uninterested into investing or pursuing problem-solving for South Africa’s most pressing issues for years. Particularly for regions like Western Cape ruled by rival parties.
@mariusvanc2 жыл бұрын
@@ariyune7007 The federal government never wants you to have more autonomy. So good luck with that.
@dawoodwilliams36522 жыл бұрын
@@ariyune7007 it really isn't a nightmare
@melissalubbe86002 жыл бұрын
I arrived back in Cape Town after living in Canada in December 2017. The shock of how water was wasted in Canada (I had a friend who would take like 30min showers to warm up) compared to what we had to do at home was so stark. We would shower with half presser, turning the tap on only to rinse soap off, and with a bucket to collect the run off which we used to flush the toilet once a day. The really scary part is that there are more cities, just up the East Coast, like Gqeberha (previously known as Port Elizabeth) that are going through the same thing, but because they are not as popular as Cape Town it is not as published. Yesterday I heard that the hospitals don't have enough water to wash laundry so they can't admit patients.
@cxzact92042 жыл бұрын
Tbh, besides the fact that it's a more well known and bigger town, the reason CT got more press than PE is because the CoCT was being loud with awareness campaigns, billboards, radio ads and projects all over the city. NMBM put up a few signs back in 2018/19 and seems to have forgotten about it since.
@KateeAngel2 жыл бұрын
Maybe people in more wealthy nations should learn about it and learn how to save water. Wasting such a necessary resource while so many people in the world are lacking it, is not good
@Old_Ladies2 жыл бұрын
@@KateeAngel we have an over abundance of water in Canada. It is basically a near infinite amount in many regions. Even when we have multi year droughts we don't run out of water. Canada has 21% of the world's fresh water. Water levels are increasing in the great lakes but they do fluctuate. The vast majority of water consumption returns to the water table except for in agriculture and oil/gas sector. So it isn't really a problem to take a 30 minute shower in most of Canada. Especially since almost all of that water will get returned back to the water table.
@ChineduOpara2 жыл бұрын
@@Old_Ladies Can you send me a gallon of that good stuff? I'll send you a buck fifty U$D
@ItsBingus692 жыл бұрын
nobody cares.
@bravo100th2 жыл бұрын
As someone who lives in Cape Town, apocalyptic is no exaggeration. It really felt as if society was about to decend into chaos in early 2018. Thankfully those winter 2018 rains came in clutch.
@danbrownellfuzzy30102 жыл бұрын
I followed that story and you could feel the desperation in the news reports. Every year with more normal rain buys you preparation time. These political parties you have can be replaced.
@ireallylovegod2 жыл бұрын
It's not if but when..... :(
@danbrownellfuzzy30102 жыл бұрын
@@ireallylovegod im in America but it seems like the two parties you have in charge have such a wonderful future planned out for you. 149 little water wagons where you stand in line. This is where the problem. Spend money now and move the politicians out of the way with bulldozers if you have to.
@am10editz102 жыл бұрын
As I live in South Africa I agree
@haydenarnott70282 жыл бұрын
As a another South African who lived in Cape Town during the drought, I can agree that the rains in 2018 did indeed come in clutch
@alexanderblackie67042 жыл бұрын
I currently live in another town in South Africa. It's called Grahamstown/ Makhanda in the Eastern Cape. The water crisis has continued here, to the point where they frequently do half and half days, wherein only one-half of the town will have water one day. And the other half can have it another day. Also, the tap water is undrinkable, so you have to buy bottled water as a grocery item.
@gakpo_era2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video. I moved to Cape Town at the height of the drought (great timing) and we had to have buckets in our showers to capture whatever water we could, and then use that to water the plants and flush the toilets etc. (one of many frustrating and scary remedies we had to implement)! Also, a note on pronunciation that SA'ns will appreciate: apartheid is pronounced apart-heyt. It is something of a compound word in Afrikaans and the T and H aren't meant to be read together, and D's are often pronounced as T's :p
@rais19532 жыл бұрын
Yes I remember during apartheid someone pointed out that for English speakers it could be pronounced "apart-hate." My only visit to SA was a few years after the official end of apartheid so I didn't see the worst of it.
@shingon6662 жыл бұрын
Monterrey, the second largest city in Mexico, experienced massive water shortages because of a heavy drought in June and July of this year (2022) and it was exactly the same: the national government blamed the local government, the local government blamed the national government, and in the end no one gave a definitive solution to the crisis. I guess this kind of situation is a problem everywhere.
@avg_ale212 жыл бұрын
As a proud Regio. I can say that we are living in the hell
@alanmunilla71962 жыл бұрын
And from what I hear, there's still no solution to the problem, I live not too far away in Torreón and it does seem like we could be headed in that direction.
@avg_ale212 жыл бұрын
@@alanmunilla7196 Yeah, Samuel García has not done anything to get a real solution. This week we had some rainy days and I hope we will keep having that. U know? And I hope Coahuila won't be in the same situation. (Sorry for the Bad English, I'm still a newbie)
@boeing787thebest12 жыл бұрын
Was?
@alanmunilla71962 жыл бұрын
@@boeing787thebest1 Restrictions may have worked to some degree but it's no permanent solution, hopefully the situation there improves.
@warrenslater40892 жыл бұрын
Look up Port Elizabeth. It’s another city, about 700km east of Cape Town. We’ve had a much much bigger water issue here for the last 11 years and neither the local nor national government have even tried to fix it. Cape Town gets all the press because it’s a popular tourist destination but other large cities are suffering worse than they are.
@Hero1010102 жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 Oh... You're serious? HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA THE ABSOLUTE STATE
@Tribuneoftheplebs2 жыл бұрын
@@Hero101010 port english cucked by monarchy is the best name.
@jrr69472 жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 🤣🤣🤣No one calls it that stupid name. All the government can do is rename because they can't build, so they have to rename so that it looks like an achivement!
@hydromic25182 жыл бұрын
@@julm7744 just let people call it whatever they want, as long as we bicker over names nothing important will get done
@chendaforest2 жыл бұрын
Call it what you like it won't fix the water shortage.
@DeanPaarman2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it was quite something to live through. This is an incredible overview, captured all aspects. No one else has summarised it this thoroughly. Have enjoyed your channel for years, but to see a video about something I lived through gives me a newfound respect for the level of research and detail you put into your videos. Thank you for covering this.
@DylanIhtiyar2 жыл бұрын
Danki
@ChineduOpara2 жыл бұрын
It's a good channel
@nenmaster52182 жыл бұрын
@@ChineduOpara WATER-CRISIS AHEAD. Please be aware/updated thx to Second Thought and Some-More-News having covered the Water-Issues that affect the whole Planet. I will comment this multiple times, risking to be mistaken for a bot, just to reach more people.
@garyking40322 жыл бұрын
Agree 100% Dean
@davidschwartz51272 жыл бұрын
The SouthWestern residents of the United States need to pay close attention to this video the very same disaster is coming their way and they are still skipping merrily down the road, "as there is no problem here"
@gracekruger762 жыл бұрын
I lived in Somerset West, a town near Cape Town, it was really a tough to live in. The restrictions became a way of life and some people still follow some of the lesser restrictions. I remember if you went to a shop, all water bottles in the them were gone or super expensive. Though now it is way better.
@craighenry95122 жыл бұрын
Not every water scarce area has this advantage, but Cape Town’s obvious solution is building desalinization plants. With their proximity to the ocean, they have access to a much more bountiful renewable body of water. They should take advantage now. They have a real solution to their problem. Many other places do not.
@geno39112 жыл бұрын
Hong Kong had this problem for a long time, up until around ~1970 every couple years people would need to queue up on the closest tap for water until they signed a water agreement with China, switched toilets from freshwater flushing to saltwater flushing and rationed water. It actually got so bad that water was only open every 4 days for 4 hours at a time as this problem was exacerbated by huge immigration and population to the city.
@extrastuff94632 жыл бұрын
Flushing toilets with salt water always seemed like a good solution to coastal region to me. But the infrastructure requirements would be tricky, you'd need a lot of extra plumbing to get the salt water into and out of the residential buildings. Getting it there is one thing but retrofitting it into existing buildings might be even harder/impossible since buildings won't all be standard or easy to get into. How did Hong Kong handle that? An impactful mandatory requirement for existing buildings or letting it happen gradually over time as places go through periodic major renovations/new building projects?
@paxundpeace99702 жыл бұрын
Still today hongkong is much different. It were back then it has neighbors with water this is lacking in this case.
@paxundpeace99702 жыл бұрын
@@extrastuff9463 They build a lot of new buildings since 1970s. Millions of new flats
@planefan0822 жыл бұрын
@@extrastuff9463 In Hong Kong, every building is required to clean, upgrade, or replace their exteriors at least once every 8 years. I'm not sure when the policy began, but the impact is that, very often, buildings simply end up getting renovated. Everything's always shiny, plus saving water saves money anyways, so why not?
@capetownwild2 жыл бұрын
interesting. thanks!
@JoelReid2 жыл бұрын
Cape Town took a lesson from Perth in Australia and invested in desalinisation plants. Perth has a similiar climate and has been using desalination since the 1990s to provide a very large amount of its water since it realised that it could have water problems. Cape Town was publicaly criticised in teh media for not doing ti sooner despite warnigns to do so. This is really a lesson as to what happens when a city doesnt plan in advance.
@cxzact92042 жыл бұрын
To be fair, Kuwait did this in the 50's. (Also to be even more fair the City of Cape Town has no control over budgetary planning and spending on water resources but that's just semantic.)
@KashifKhan-ez8px2 жыл бұрын
Question that needs to be asked is what has happen since and what’s actually still in place 😉. Have they learnt a lesson.. I’d say no. So watch this repeat itself. I think the local gov is pinning its hopes on being in charge of country instead of properly planning for the inevitable.. much like they did prior wrt being in charge of WC.. didn’t stop it. Being from Cpt means while this last drought was the most significant.. it wasnt the 1st nor will it be the last and with the massive growth of population you need more adequate supply.
@blumoogle29012 жыл бұрын
To be fair, serious experts from every water-related field in every university in the country, several prominent private organisations, NGOs and even several departments of the national, provincial government and City itself had given quite extensive, explicit and detailed warnings and strong recommendations on how to avoid the very foreseeable water problems since the late 80s. A very similar group also gave very similar warnings about electricity supplies starting at about the same time. It's not that no planning was done; the plans existed wholesale and detailed in scope. No-one wanted to implement the plans and be responsible for the short term costs. Private companies have been begging to solve these problems for ages - far before they actually, inevitably became obvious to the citizens at large - and had drawn up realistic cost estimates, plans and pitches and contract negotiations could have started in 1995 already, if the government was willing.
@JoelReid2 жыл бұрын
@@blumoogle2901 yes, the government was warned and plans were there... they just didnt do it
@vandyk49842 жыл бұрын
3 Desalination plants were built, I worked on 1 of them. To my knowledge, all 3 have been disassembled.
@deebte__2 жыл бұрын
i can see southern california being headed this way soon, all our reservoirs keep getting lower and lower, we've had a triple la nina (winter rain goes to oregon and washington instead of california) which may continue this winter, and that would probably kill a few ski resorts, especially with it getting hotter pretty much every summer, june and july are always not too hot but august always is, it's been upper 80s pretty much the whole month when the "average" is like 83, and these upper 80s are set to continue into next week and maybe the week after even small lakes in parks are slowly drying up, one park had two lakes and a large marsh but one of the lakes and the marsh are dry, leaving only the main lake
@Br3ttM2 жыл бұрын
The difference is that most of California's water is for farming, and much of that produce is exported. So water shortages wouldn't leave people thirsty, they'd just kill cash crops that the region's environment can't sustain.
@NaderNabilart2 жыл бұрын
@@Br3ttM and ditch their precious avocados? Not a chance!
@seancostello41582 жыл бұрын
@@NaderNabilart you forgot the almonds lol
@lifeb4game2 жыл бұрын
I wish summers here were in the 80s, we get high 90s and into the 100s from late May through to the end of August. And winters in the single digits into the negatives. Must be nice.
@NaderNabilart2 жыл бұрын
@@seancostello4158 Haha yeah them too
@dextercochran49162 жыл бұрын
"Cape Town is facing a huge water crisis!" *SHOWS DRONE FOOTAGE OF ENORMOUS GOLF COURSE NEXT TO A SOCCER STADIUM*
@CrushedFemur2 жыл бұрын
I was living in Cape Town when Day 0 was supposed to happen. I showered every other day for only up to 5 minutes, flushed the toilet with that water, UCT didn't have running sinks at the time and just had hand sanitizer. I had it good by comparison to people who live in the townships, thats for sure. It was apocalyptic to be sure
@timkirsten61842 жыл бұрын
As a Capetonian I'm really impressed with your research and nuanced video. The mention of the impact of invasive plant species was great, it's often overlooked here.
@ThapeloTP12 жыл бұрын
Great video, as a South African this was an unbelievable situation to live through. You should do another Video about the drought happening right now. In the Eastern Cape Province's biggest city the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality. They have hit day 0. By the way, the people of Cape Town are called Capetonian's 🙂
@andrefortuin45542 жыл бұрын
I'm from PE and we haven't hit day 0 yet, but we are approaching it, our biggest supply dam is 16.6%. The metro only has 5 major Dams, 4 of which we share with the neighboring Kouga Municipality and the surrounding farm, this is a real Issue and still you find water leaks
@ThapeloTP12 жыл бұрын
@@andrefortuin4554 Ah! apologies thought it had hit already. if only those pesky 'coalition' politicians would stop trying to stay in power and work for the people. 😞
@andrefortuin45542 жыл бұрын
If only my brother, if only... I also wish the majority of people would see the seriousness of the situation and start to use water sparingly
@odw322 жыл бұрын
@@andrefortuin4554 And major world powers would stop threatening each other with bombs, stop extorting countries (Like many areas in Africa, Sri Lanka, Eastern Europe), and instead help each other to protect vulnerable areas, build better water management & implement sustainable energy. Humanity is like a family where everyone is fighting about which TV channel to watch, while the house is burning down around them.
@israel_awakes49562 жыл бұрын
We call Capetonian's KEIPPIES [CAPE / CAPIES] . They also have the best wines in the world.
@thecatat72 жыл бұрын
Thank you for a very good and objective report. We Cape Tonians came together as one and we all did our bit to save water. Every time I open a tap now, I think twice and use water sparingly. I vividly recall when the first rain fell how the people whistled, screamed and shouted with joy! Finally it rained ... the drought has broken ...
@vincenttt82892 жыл бұрын
*came together* 😏
@projektkobra22472 жыл бұрын
Objective?
@JohnGardnerAlhadis2 жыл бұрын
@@projektkobra2247 Stating facts instead of colouring them with shades of left/right-political bias. Both political parties were guilty of doing the exact same shit that every politician is guilty of: dealing with an impending environmental crisis only at the last minute (when it can no longer be ignored...)
@projektkobra22472 жыл бұрын
@@JohnGardnerAlhadis -I know what it means. Christ. I'm questioning the veracity of the claim. South Africa isnt "better" now after the arrival of black rule. It's Haiti with gold mines.
@JohnGardnerAlhadis2 жыл бұрын
@@projektkobra2247 Gee, no shit? Who would've thought an entire country's socio-political issues would be harder to solve than just _"put the black guy in charge, lmao."_
@neoturfmasterMVS2 жыл бұрын
Everything is so catastrophic, over emphasied and hyped up on this channel to level 10.
@espressonoob2 жыл бұрын
cape town running out of water was a massive fucking deal and all over the news for months rtrd.
@neoturfmasterMVS2 жыл бұрын
@@espressonoob
@burnshirtvalleyfarm63372 жыл бұрын
"A very limited source of water" Shows water being dumped onto the ground.
@ankushgogna46282 жыл бұрын
This channel has taught me SO much stuff. I don't think I would know any of this, if this channel didn't exist. More people need to watch these videos. To prepare and save the future of humanity.
@slevinchannel75892 жыл бұрын
I CANT Stress enough to my fellow RLL-Fans: Some More News and Second-Thought are the 2 KZbinrs with BEST Water-Shortage-Coverage!
@danialamin2522 жыл бұрын
English: how many times do you want to use the word "exacerbate" RLL: Yes
@helenzhao29262 жыл бұрын
For those who are confused about the water sources being replenished by September, South Africa is in the southern Hemisphere so they get winter between May and September.
@robbrent2 жыл бұрын
Except that the Cape Province has a Mediterranean climate meaning that their rains fall with this May to September winter season.
@gkolivier89182 жыл бұрын
Only the South-Western parts of the country have a Mediterranean climate. Rain is in the winter months from May to September. The North-Eastern regions don't generally get rain in this period, mainly during our summer.
@joshua356192 жыл бұрын
Interesting fact, if the Earth's temperature goes up so does the humidity level which equals more rain not less. But if the Earth gets colder than the humidity level goes down which makes the Earth's climate very dry which equals less rain. so yeah it might seem bad if the temperature is going up but it has benefits as well not just disadvantages.
@TheeVande2 жыл бұрын
How did a video about water almost running out teach me more about the apartheid than any schooling ever did?
@lonestranger2 жыл бұрын
A relevant reason to properly pronounce apartheid without the "th" sound, like either ah-pahr-teid (Afrikaans) or uh-par-tide (English) is because of its meaning. It literally means apart-hood, in other words apartness or the state of being apart. A-par-thyde doesn't mean anything.
@Roach1313132 жыл бұрын
I came here to bring up the inaccurate pronunciation...
@fullmetaltheorist2 жыл бұрын
@@Roach131313 Bru 😂
@camchristian14802 жыл бұрын
My dads family were part of the group exiled from district 6 . Nice to hear an International channel speak about it
@johndoeiii97672 жыл бұрын
Yet they never once mentioned _"Cape Malays"_ and _"Cape Coloureds"_ when talking about Cape Town. That's sad bru.
@seadkolasinac72202 жыл бұрын
@@johndoeiii9767 probably because he didn’t look into Cape Town’s exact demographics in that much detail when researching the water crisis
@camchristian14802 жыл бұрын
@@johndoeiii9767 true. But I guess he wasn’t focusing so much on the exact demographics of people living there
@alexrossouw77022 жыл бұрын
@@johndoeiii9767 The word "coloured" is derogatory in the USA, so they probably side-stepped it...
@unncommonsense2 жыл бұрын
@@alexrossouw7702 But "people of colour" is fine, makes no sense.
@tyroth58432 жыл бұрын
So happy that you spoke about South Africa!🇿🇦
@rudi.delange2 жыл бұрын
Lived through this, learned a lot of valuable lessons about preserving this precious resource. Even though I live in an area now that is likely never to run out of water, I still let the yellow mellow, and take quick 90 second showers, to name a few. I didn't realise how wasteful we were until the taps started running dry. I should mention that normally, Cape Town winters are very wet, it can rain non stop for weeks on end. No South African would in a million years have thought this would happen to Cape Town. What we experienced in 2015-2018 was extremely out of the ordinary. The city (and probably some other cities in the world) learned a valuable lesson in that you cannot always depend on the weather to be consistent.
@seanseoltoir2 жыл бұрын
Supposedly, Cape Town only gets around 20" or rain each year... Around here, we would call that a "drought" -- our average is around 50" per year and we've had years with over 80"... I've known a few people from South Africa... They said that it used to be a pretty safe place, back before the ANC took over...
@tuckerbugeater2 жыл бұрын
@@seanseoltoir Weather modification
@PokoTheDinosaur2 жыл бұрын
RealLifeLore: They called it day 0. The day they ran out of water. Me: are we restarting are Calendars to 0 again?
@gophtheengine61852 жыл бұрын
As a resident of Lima, we had our water shortage problem too back in 2017, albeit it wasn't that bad when compared to Cape Town's drought. Long story short every 5 to 7 years el niño comes in and flash floods occur naturally, and this niño in particular polluted the reservoir so badly that we had no water for an entire week. But the real reason why i put this forward is because that flood could've been worse, because up in the Andes next to the 22 central highway and the Rimac river(the primary water source for the entire city) there's mineral waste of a mining operation done by a belgian company which left the country almost a decade ago, which is only protected by canvas and is sitting next to the primary water source. Had this flood became worse or and 8.0 earthquake hit that place, then all that mineral waste would've polluted the river and would've closed the Atarjea reservoir indefinitely, in the 2nd largest city located in a desert, only behind El Cairo. Edit: there are also underground aquifers and water desalinization plants but only cover a tiny fraction of the city's demand.
@keynage66932 жыл бұрын
Average balgian corporation moment
@Erakius3232 жыл бұрын
Why the heck has no one cleaned up that mineral waste? Sounds like they did not even attempt to make a tailings pond. 😳
@keynage66932 жыл бұрын
@@Erakius323cause that's easy mineral water strait in the drinking supply, next all you need is an underground reservoir of CO2 and you got sparkling water on tap 💯
@gophtheengine61852 жыл бұрын
@@Erakius323 The same i asked and the answer lied in a judicial drama that was last followed in 2019 and then no one knows what happened afterwards. Oh and by the way there's yet another mining project that's gonna take place, you guessed it, next to a body of water, this time in the upstream lagoons that feed the river. It hasn't materialized yet and hopefully it never will.
@chiedzawith2ds2 жыл бұрын
Lol and then the other side of the El Nino is what caused the drought in South Africa. Weather science is fucked.
@midaspool62292 жыл бұрын
8:39 as a dutchman, I can fully understand why you didn’t try to pronounce “Theewaterskloofdam” 😂
@theNicholas11172 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😭
@PROVOCATEURSK2 жыл бұрын
Tí-uater-sklóf-dem
@slevinchannel75892 жыл бұрын
I CANT Stress enough to my fellow RLL-Fans: Some More News and Second-Thought are the 2 KZbinrs with BEST Water-Shortage-Coverage!
@blumoogle29012 жыл бұрын
As an Afrikaans speaking person, I was disappointed not to get to hear new and interesting ways to butcher the local names.
@GreoGreo Жыл бұрын
@@blumoogle2901 "Local names"
@shadowmask93652 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you talked about one of my country's capital cities and the problems it had to face
@IAmTheDawn2 жыл бұрын
We have faced it together my brother, and we will continue to bear down on the white people who made this our reality. Soon, it will be our time, I promise.
@anthonyrau53132 жыл бұрын
As a Cape Town resident for the past 20 years, I think it is important to understand that provincial and local governments have little budget or power to initiate large infrastructure projects such as dam or water supply systems. It is all centralised through the corrupt national government, and the ANC used the water shortage as an opportunity to play politics and make the DA look bad, despite the catastrophic consequences of this decision. The DA has made Cape Town the best run Metro in the country, by miles. Unfortunately their ability to grow and improve the metros is often severely handicapped by national government decisions and policies, and of course widespread ANC corruption.
@nenmaster52182 жыл бұрын
WATER-CRISIS AHEAD. Please be aware/updated thx to Second Thought and Some-More-News having covered the Water-Issues that affect the whole Planet. I will comment this multiple times, risking to be mistaken for a bot, just to reach more people.
@bromanHenk12 жыл бұрын
I was working with my dad in his landscaping company when this hit, he had to pivot his business drastically, and started installing astro turf, water efficient plants, but the main thing was grey water (recycling showers, sinks, ect.) and bore hole tanks. It was a crazy time, I remember Id dive into the ocean and dry myself off fast, not letting the salt stick to my skin, and then take a shower every 3 days with a bucket underneath that we filled up the toilet with, using hand sanitiser instead soap. The list goes on, people really banded together. If I had to compare it to anything, it felt like the pandemic, in terms of the mass fatigue and stress, but also how it brought up the best and worst of humanity
@dawoodwilliams36522 жыл бұрын
Living in Cape Town it felt like one disaster after another, first the Water crisis, then all the fires on the mountains, then the Covid Pandemic and we still have a country wide energy crisis. Just one correction on what you mentioned of District 6, it was never a mainly black town, although there were some black and white people that lived there, however it was Coloured/Malay town, as those are group of people that makes up the majority of Cape Towns population.
@metroop2 жыл бұрын
Remember coloured people are in part black people
@DIEKALSTER82 жыл бұрын
I guess all of those coloured people would count as black people over in the US.
@warrenvanwyk62492 жыл бұрын
As with every other "problem" in South Africa (for the past couple of decades), all that is needed is to follow the proverbial money. You will find it always leads back to the same common denominator... leaving you with no doubt about who is to blame.
@Noctem_pasa2 жыл бұрын
Please elaborate
@assertivekarma19092 жыл бұрын
Details would help those not familiar, as an American I can say I want to apologize for draconian pressures put on the "white" segment of society to integrate the many hostile dysfunctions you were embedded within. SA had problems, and needed some reforms, but foreign do gooders are often arrogantly naive.
@DIEKALSTER82 жыл бұрын
@@Noctem_pasa The ANC ruling party is a cesspool of corruption at every level of government and government entities, like the local broadcaster, the local airline, railway, the local electricity producer etc etc etc. As a result, basic services, infrastructure, joblessness, crime etc all across the country have been getting worse and worse, to the point where things will get way worse before they get better.
@tshepishochuene12802 жыл бұрын
That darn ANC. How could they not pay mother nature her water bills🤦🏾♂️
@DIEKALSTER82 жыл бұрын
@@tshepishochuene1280 They refused to pay for infrastructure that could have prevented the problem. Too busy looting.
@TikkaQrow2 жыл бұрын
Las Vegas has some of the best water reclamation infrastructure in the world, recycling almost 99% of indoor water for reuse elsewhere. As Cape Town has no choice but to update it's haphazard and aged infrastructure, it could take some broad design notes from Vegas tech. Along with desalination (preferably nuclear), Cape Town could very well be poised to be a world leader and icon in municipal water management in the 21st century if they handle funding and planning carefully.
@vinniechan2 жыл бұрын
these sorts of things are spurred by necessity until push comes to shuff people generally dont think too much about it and just enjoy whatever costs the least and provides grestest convinience.
@ireallylovegod2 жыл бұрын
Just don't build pointless cities in the desert would be a nice start.
@piotrkosakowski70712 жыл бұрын
in this broken corrupted country that RPA has become?;p good joke:p maybe if China will sponsor it..
@maxsalmon49802 жыл бұрын
@@ireallylovegod In fairness, it wasn't pointless when it was built. It's just not essential NOW. But it didn't just stop existing because someone dug a canal. :)
@ireallylovegod2 жыл бұрын
@@maxsalmon4980 After the railworkers finished with it then it was just a cash cow for the mob, i call that pointless.
@cheri2382 жыл бұрын
Real Life Fore has one of the best documentaries programs on KZbin. So many good ones. THANK YOU. ❤️
@mehere80382 жыл бұрын
I'm watching this from Sydney Australia, realising for the first time how close we came to the same thing. We used rainwater ONLY & have always been subject to weather extremes, with years without rain, then years of flooding & with a dam opened in 1960, when the population was 2 million people, as opposed to today's 5 million, with no upgrades to infrastructure to respond to that. In the early 2000's, we had a number of years without rain. I remember on countless occasions seeing clouds forming & wondering if I should bring in the washing, before thinking "na, it's Sydney, it doesn't rain here" & just leaving it, quite comfortable in the knowledge that the clouds would just pass over & no rain would come of them. Add to that, we had massive bushfires that required massive amounts of water be used on them to stop the city burning! Kinda seems crazy now to realise how many people scoffed at the idea of wasting our taxes building a desalination plant in case it happened again. There was huge numbers of negative press stories as the plant was built & then left inactive, while still requiring maintenence funds for a full decade, before it was finally turned on when we experienced the same drought system Cape Town did. Because of that desal option, we didn't need to go into harsh restrictions & I don't think that 2017/18 situation was as bad for us as the millennial drought, even removing the desal plant from the equation, given it was only turned on for a few months at the end point of it. I'm very glad we had that option available to us though & obviously Cape Town needs to do similar now as an insurance policy!
@kuunib73252 жыл бұрын
To be honest I live in Switzerland and we have a drought too right now. Fields with dried out crops on them. I haven't mowed the lawn in over a month, would probably have more dust that grass in the bin afterwards. I work at the Badi (think municipal bath/waterpark we even have a new waterslide) and it's becoming kind of tight as to whether we can water the lawn there, in addition to that the pool takes about 2.3 Million liters of water and we have to clean aswell. Rather praradox, the hotter it is the more visitors we have, the more water we expend in cleaning and circulating fresh water into the pools, though water is being filtered and recurculated constantly.
@resphantom2 жыл бұрын
It's almost like global warming is affecting all the climates in the world. 😜
@capetownwild2 жыл бұрын
Sounds very similar to Cape Town, I see the whole of Europe is under a heat wave.
@heidirabenau5112 жыл бұрын
In the UK we are having fires in cities and all the crops are dead
@moritamikamikara38792 жыл бұрын
Britain's facing drought, our reservoirs are running dry, we haven't had rain in months. I want the stereotype to come back again
@capetownwild2 жыл бұрын
@@moritamikamikara3879 I've been seeing the pics, crazy. You will be green soon, the rain will come.
@kash13272 жыл бұрын
I live in the Eastern Cape province, and unfortunately with different government parties running the provinces than the national government it makes the bureaucracy to get anything done that much harder, as well as misuse of money the amount of corruption in our government our infrastructure will seemingly never get better. For example, here in the Eastern Cape water is still in very short supply, the dams that supply Gqeberha (Formally Port Elizabeth) are often below 20% capacity, we have days where our water is shut off for 4+ hours to preserve water. And years ago, instead of building a desalination plant, which was proposed due to the drought and forseen future shortages, the government felt that spending 100 Million+ South African Rand (ZAR) to change the Port Elizabeth's name to the aforementioned Gqeberha (keh - bear - ggg - ah)
@yo19991002 жыл бұрын
something similar is happening in Monterrey, Mexico, actually its happening all over the north of mexico with different reasons like soda companies and droughts, dont know if thats a video topic youd like to cover but seems interesting
@KoxiarzZMC2 жыл бұрын
could you elaborate? what's happening, what's going on with the soda companies etc?
@strikeone78032 жыл бұрын
@@KoxiarzZMC the water is being cut around 3:00 PM beacuse the local dams water levels are dangerously low. That being said a lot of people are blaming this entirely on climate change when the reality is that the state's governor kicked out all the people responsible for water maintenance/supply with friends/yes men of his and they don't know jack shit on dam maintenance and the state is suffering for his incompetence partly. We northern Mexicans have had hot summers way before I was born, last two summers particularly were hotter than this one and rains were rare but people conveniently forget that and just coincidentally after the new governor was elected and he sacked all the state's old employees the water issue began to surface/deteriorate. So while there is a an increased lack of water in northern mexico because of general drought, in my city most educated people agree the fault lies on the millennial idiot from San Pedro (rich district) who somehow got elected, since the high temperatures and absent rains in June/July have been a thing since forever. That doesn't mean climate change didn't made things worse tho. Living in extremes for years makes you desensitized to this shit.
@yo19991002 жыл бұрын
@@strikeone7803 thats for Monterrey, theres other areas in northern mexico affected Coca-Cola, Pepsi, Danone, Nestlé, Bimbo, Aga y otras empresas de productos chatarra extraen anualmente 133 mil millones de litros de agua para producir comida y bebida que no sólo afectan la salud de los consumidores sino que además provocan serios daños ambientales en México. which translates to : Coke, Pepsi, Danone, Nestle, Bimbo, Aga (local soda company) and other junk food companies exctract 133 Billion Liters of water (around 36 billion gallons) annually to produce food and beverages (? that not only affect the consumer s health but also do serious environmental damage in Mexico take this knowing that most of this companies work near the us, you know, to make it easy to export, working in a somewhat arid area and people is suffering with water shortages constantly
@Coochie_Cuttah2 жыл бұрын
@@KoxiarzZMC The soda companies and breweries in that area have been taking up or have drained most of their water source for production thanks to what I may understand is the govts fault for both the State and City (Talking about Monterrey Metropolitan Area in the state of Nuevo León, MX) thats what I’m hearing about for that situation as well as these long hot dry summers that have swept Northern and pretty much a good chunk of Central Mexico
@planplo2 жыл бұрын
@@KoxiarzZMC adding up to previous answers, it's something similar of what happened in Texas with the the power shortage. Politicians and Industrial leaders assumed that favorable climate conditions would stay like and ignored warnings, stepped back from preventive measures and bet on economic growth placing general wellbeing on the table; believing they would surely win that bet. Experts on scientific communication here in Mexico are actually trying to promote the use of the term "desertification" over "drought" because the warnings have been ignored since the mid 2010s and they believe "drought" has made people assume it's a temporary event, or that the presence of rain (even if it's less every year) means it's over.
@pauldacus45902 жыл бұрын
I like this dudes dramatic reading style. Every sentence is more important than the last.
@MrGadd12 жыл бұрын
I remember the worst part was inviting people over and telling them not to flush..
@pallettown33582 жыл бұрын
This is a very interesting video, If you get the chance you should look into covering the drying up of Lake mead in Nevada/Arizona and how it’s severely impacting society and agriculture in the southwestern U.S
@mehere80382 жыл бұрын
in reality, that's a total nothingburger compared to other countries. You're still watering lawns with water from those dams ffs! Completely self induced & you deserve everything you get if you can't figure out the need to use water sensibly as your dam levels continue to drop at alarming levels for years & years!
@harriskantounis52122 жыл бұрын
So amazing this long streak of weekly videos.Very grateful, indeed
@joesgetndown2 жыл бұрын
You’ve been doing a lot of extremely interesting topics lately. Not to throw shade on your older stuff, but I’m finding the recent stuff excellent.
@caimaccoinnich95942 жыл бұрын
I live in Cape Town. Flushing the toilet or showering were a luxury no matter your finances in 2018. It was very scary. We actually already had waterpoints set up at natural springs.
@RyanMariners2 жыл бұрын
If there's no capes in cape town, I'm not going.
@wiseone10132 жыл бұрын
That was insightful, good job. Kindly cover our disgraceful electricity problems also 👍
@chattw68852 жыл бұрын
Wasnt this problem predicted by a whole bunch of people in 2015 when the city council started firing a lot of the engineers whos job was keeping the water supply running, and then filling up those jobs with people who were not qualified for this at all but were politically more favored. I really dont wanna be that guy, but when your city disaster that you claimed was only because of lack of rain, was already predicted years in advance then I have my doubts if this is not simply a scapegoat... Edit: Just so you guys know what I am talking about. I was listening to a whole bunch of podcasts in 2015 and on one of those the guest was some guy from cape town who was telling this story of how this local goverment was firing all those people with the know how of how to run the citys water supply. I still remeber feeling pretty baffeled that you would hear nothing from any traditional media site anywhere in the west about this. Basicially at the end of the podcast the guy was literally crying while talking about how the current goverment is destroying the city and they dont want to listen. He very explicitly explained that in the coming years the city will completly run out of water if they dont do anything about it.
@Brunolito20172 жыл бұрын
I remeber that! They replaced the white engeeners wirh Black ones....
@Skulk932 жыл бұрын
Also every year white farmers are murdered because of "unequal farmland distribution"
@kalebbruwer2 жыл бұрын
I've heard similar stories about Eskom... Also, I don't think they're lying that the drought caused the shortage, but that doesn't mean that they wouldn't have been able to weather it if only they prepared. You know the saying, you must save up for a not-so-rainy day
@tonycatman2 жыл бұрын
Yes. This is exactly what happened. I work with a woman who is related to one of those people fired. The firing and hiring was done purely on the basis of skin colour - I think related to BBBEE policies. Anyone who dared suggest that the new hirees weren't capable of doing the job was queried with "So you don't think black people can do the job of a white person ?" This completely ignored the fact that the average incumbent had 15 years of experience. The consequences of the drought were 100% foreseeable, and could have been mitigated by better management. At least some of the mitigation which didn't take place related to intra-city disagreements. So the water existed, but was not being distributed in the best way - the correct palms weren't being greased etc. I'm not surprised that I never read about this in the media, but it should serve as a warning to the US states who introduce equity acts. Trying to do this kind of thing overnight leads to suffering.
@keshi5541 Жыл бұрын
@@tonycatman So dumb firing them. As a black man I believe experience should matter the most not the colour of your skin with these types of important jobs and firing/hiring someone based of their race seems pretty racist.
@mrniceguy71682 жыл бұрын
The ANC is horribly incompetent and can never accept blame.
@rdm38052 жыл бұрын
I love watching your videos about places all over the world and today, finally my home town! Great video! Thanks!
@resphantom2 жыл бұрын
Turns out that having a flatbed of a dam makes water evaporate very fast. Who knew? But also the fact that comparitively to all the other Towns and Cities in South Africa, Cape Town has the most possible opportunities to make a solid living, hence why the population growth is so rapid. Not because infrastructure is necessarily increasing, but more because infrastructure everywhere else is failing.
@bendrebotha2 жыл бұрын
You can have a look at Gqeberha, previously Port Elizabeth, another city in South Africa, that currently has almost no water with experts predicting little to no rain for the next six years!
@WarPigstheHun2 жыл бұрын
I blame the ANC. You can't force people to build a reservoir without pay.
@BOT-MERC2 жыл бұрын
@Fitz the dragon the african national party(a political party).
@SouthernTip2 жыл бұрын
But the Western Cape and Cape Town has always been run by the DA
@bze31282 жыл бұрын
@@BOT-MERC African national congress
@ebenezerberty90322 жыл бұрын
@@SouthernTip don't they get their funds from ANC regardless.
@shauryathebeast32102 жыл бұрын
Yup
@kalebbruwer2 жыл бұрын
Good video, I think South Africa's current electricity crisis can also make a good topic. There's a long history of different flavours of mismanagement there.
@karllichtenberg41242 жыл бұрын
As a Capetonian, I remember showering over a bucket and using that water to flush toilets, we would use leftover water for anything that didn't require clean water. It even went so far as at school being encouraged to arrive in sports kit so you wouldn't need to wash extra clothes, in early 2018, school sports matches were almost all cancelled as preparation of fields and pools was almost impossible. Announcements in school assemblies and signs in almost any publuc bathroom, not just in school, with the slogan "if it's yellow, let it mellow. If it's brown flush it down." Cause you weren't supposed to flush if you just needed a pee. When showering, we would turn off the tap while washing ourselves and only have the water on to rinse. In gyms, there was a loud timer counting down 2 minutes in repeat so you could keep to a 2 minute shower, and baths were not allowed (obviously there was no way of policing this but everyone did their bit). The collective strength our population showed was incredible and we all did our part to keep day 0 as far as possible. The attitude we all had towards the regulations and restrictions was one of trust and belief. Not like what we saw across the world (SA included) towards Covid and that is why we got through it. A couple times day 0 was pushed back a bit not because of rains but because we were using less water. We all knew the day and it was mainstream news when it changed, which happened any time there was any rain.
@andrefortuin45542 жыл бұрын
I live in Port Elizabeth, about 740km east in the Eastern Cape province, this town is also one of the major cities in the province and we are facing a similar crisis, our biggest supply Dam is at 16.6% of Capacity.
@jfungsf8822 жыл бұрын
In addition to expanding its storage capacity, Cape Town should also invest in desalination given its proximity to the ocean.
@jonye75112 жыл бұрын
It did during the drought and can easily reassemble them when necessary.
@menkalinanminecraft57692 жыл бұрын
All of Italy is now experiencing a drought that began 2 months ago and it is so bad that ww2 relics hidden under rivers are now exposed and in many cities you can't wash your car without going to a car washing machine. Now it's getting better but it was weird living it in first person.
@alecmcgrathofcanada91752 жыл бұрын
It's convenient you just made this video. I'm traveling to South Africa in a couple months and I've been binging info-videos about SA. So it's great that my youtuber made one.
@SasquatchPicker2 жыл бұрын
I was here during the water shortage of 2017. Instantly got a water-borne illness staying at a Hostel in Capetown where we stood in buckets to recycle the water during a shower.
@koharumi12 жыл бұрын
Did you know that Perth in Australia would of been the first major city to run out of water? Only because of desalination plants and use of groundwater did it not come to fruition.
@marktwain3682 жыл бұрын
This kind of news is downplayed and likely even suppressed in North American media.
@Domini862 жыл бұрын
Love your content. Can you do a video on the load shedding issues in South Africa? There are hardly any detailed videos about it on KZbin
@Gidi662 жыл бұрын
While I'm not a citizen of cape town (I'm from a town about 1 and a half hours drive away) I still remember being told in school "if it's yellow let it mellow, if it's brown flush it"
@georein2 жыл бұрын
I'm from Cape Town and survived day zero! 😅 Great video about the situation, thank you!
@Frieslick2 жыл бұрын
This has turned into the ManBearPig channel. Klaus Schwab approves this message.
@LucyM-2 жыл бұрын
I don't know if I'd ever feel okay watering my garden or even washing my car ever again. After living through that, and how close it came to disaster, it just doesn't feel as important, you know?
@Megarith1to32 жыл бұрын
Really goes to show that rapid, unplanned, unmanaged immigration to one concentrated area does not end in sunshine and happiness. There are only so many resources to go around in one place, after all.
@akeene2282 жыл бұрын
I’m always amazed by your ability to seamlessly transition to an add at the end.
@quan-oh-re22582 жыл бұрын
I remember living rough that when i was eleven. Not aloud to bath, 2 min showers under a bucket, not aloud to flush the toilet, taps only working in the morning before they were cut for the rest of the day and more.
@Cybonator2 жыл бұрын
For future reference: in most South African languages words with "th" are pronounced as "t" and "h" separately. Example: "apartheid" is pronounced "apart-heid"; and "Lesotho" as "Leso(o)t-ho"
@sicko_the_ew2 жыл бұрын
On the right track, but not quite there. "Apart Hate" is very close to the proper pronunciation of apartheid. (Just run the words together, so it's more like "apar-tate"). The "th" in most Bantu languages is an "aspirated t" (you add an "h" to indicate that the speaker must "give a bit of air" to the letter). It's easiest to approximate that to just a "t". So yes Luhsoo. but then "Too". Luhsootoo. If you get fancy about it, a "t" on its own is "inward". Just its "t-part", and not "tuh", as it would be in most European languages. One thing that you never have is the "th" sound of "the" - or of "South". If "South" had been taken into e.g. Zulu, it would be pronounced, something like "Sowt".
@Cybonator2 жыл бұрын
@@sicko_the_ew I was giving a quick, helpful reference, not a lesson in linguistics
@sicko_the_ew2 жыл бұрын
@@Cybonator And I was expanding on it. What's the problem?
@Cybonator2 жыл бұрын
@Millennial Smark Hala phansi weirdo
@DIEKALSTER82 жыл бұрын
@@sicko_the_ew I would rather say Luhsutu.
@YouHaveAnApeHead2 жыл бұрын
It is shocking to find out how many people don't belive we can't run out of water. I saw a KZbin post on it and it was mostly year 3's that didn't know better but a surprising amount seemed like they were fully grown adults who were denying this stuff could exist because " water never runs out ".
@newjob80472 жыл бұрын
It's just need attention from the government to allocate additional fund to make the salty water drinkable just like middle east countries. South Africa is rich countries also has the capacity in all aspects to resolve the problem. For now the residence will be challenged on daily basis but for sure will be addressed very soon. Good luck guys.
@kingjames48862 жыл бұрын
you'd think with the dire shortage of water they could figure out some sort of tap or trough or something so it doesn't just pour out all over the ground...
@faaaail2 жыл бұрын
My exact thoughts! Came to the comments to see this. It's such a waste?? How and why did someone come up w this
@kingjames48862 жыл бұрын
@@faaaail I'm fairly confident at this point that africa creates it's own problems and then crys for help because they feel they've been mistreated by the world...
@anthonymorris50842 жыл бұрын
South Africa's water problem is South Africa's mismanagement problem
@logansymmes21932 жыл бұрын
I’ve been to Cape Town and it is an amazing yet dangerous place. I had no clue about the drought
@TheIrieman152 жыл бұрын
dangerous? Did you stay in the Cape flats?
@logansymmes21932 жыл бұрын
We went in a tour through them. I still felt safer there than I did in Portland tho lol
@freestate32352 жыл бұрын
@@logansymmes2193 why did they take you there. My god, did you chose the war zone tour package 😂
@abdullaahpetersen14682 жыл бұрын
@@freestate3235 brah nearly became a statistic lmao
@johndoeiii97672 жыл бұрын
@@freestate3235 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@economicsinaction2 жыл бұрын
From wars over oil 🛢️ to wars over water 💦
@gst0132 жыл бұрын
This all needs a bit of context...in a lot of poor countries where water scarcity is an issue, the idea of 25 liters per day per person sounds ridiculous. Living in rural Kenya some years back, I'd guess we were at about 2 or 3 liters per person per day. One shower per week out of a five liter bucket, toilets were outdoor and built with airflow and removal in mind, (zero water) so they actually didn't smell much at all. Any drinking water was boiled or came in bottled, and other than cooking or washing hands and face with a half cup or so of water twice a day, that was about it.
@Ashley_Schaeffer2 жыл бұрын
It is as if a bunch of people who knew nothing about farming and irrigation took over there recently....
@13thravenpurple942 жыл бұрын
Great work 🥳 Thank youuuuu 💜
@loturzelrestaurant2 жыл бұрын
Start Rain-Collecting; ignore the lingering question why a stranger comments this towards you; watch, like and share the Water-Coverage of Some-More-News and Second-Thought; realize how much better things can be by watching Not-Just-Bikes and Adam Something; learn various, various 'small things everyone can do' and ''''Life Hacks during Droughts''''; watch and spread amazing Climate-Change-Coverage like Hbomberguy, UpisnotJump, OCC, and Climate-Town; and have i mentioned Rain-Collecting?
@adamosborn41942 жыл бұрын
This could easily be fixed with desalination in the long run.
@michaelasmitty2 жыл бұрын
Desalination is still a big ask though, we need to improve the technology a lot still
@somethingiswrong89752 жыл бұрын
@@michaelasmitty True, but right now, any option seems like a good option to prevent complete water loss
@brandino97yyc2 жыл бұрын
$$$$$$
@benkalem2 жыл бұрын
Desalination isn't easy. If it were, it would be widely used already.
@sebastianhoesing17492 жыл бұрын
@@michaelasmitty Israel runs almost only on desalination plants. Its way smaller, but I could work for Capetown as well.
@tyronwheatley23062 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! The phonetic spelling of apartheid is " apar - tide" then throw in a little tongue roll with the T :D
@raritania75812 жыл бұрын
Isn't it apar-tate?
@tristanjones90802 жыл бұрын
would love to see a video on load shedding too since that still happens now across the country (its when our electricity gets turned off for 2 hours multiple times a day)
@danpom14262 жыл бұрын
Not really unique majority of developing countries have it far worse than South Africa
@sicko_the_ew2 жыл бұрын
@@danpom1426 South Africa should not be in the condition of the majority of developing countries. Even after basically a civil war, and lots of sanctions, this version of it started out being "1/4 of an Australia". Now it's "1/5 of an Australia", and that's the projected future trajectory. Look up "Zondo Commission Findings" if you want to know how the country went down when it should've gone up. (I mean relatively. Of course the economy overall has improved, floating on the boom that floated all boats. No help from a government with officials who steal everything, though.) If you knew anything more than what you think ought to be the case "for a developing country", about South Africa, you wouldn't be calling the disintegration of the electricity supply system normal (it's not total, but the country had a good economic platform to build off, so this should simply not be a problem.) If you want to discover how harmful a president can be to a country, "Jacob Zuma" should put you on the trail, too. Don't take my word for it, ask google. Google knows everything, and might even share something relevant with you.
@jameslouw65512 жыл бұрын
@@sicko_the_ew I was looking at how much Jacob Zuma’s administration cost South Africa, and it was like R470 billion rand or 33 billion dollars, that would be the equivalent of if Biden or Trump cost the US 2 trillion dollars, if you compare GDPs
@michellemcculloch2 жыл бұрын
It never ceases to amaze me how SA has been in a downward spiral for many, many years and yet the politicians running this country are multi millionaires with a billionaire or two thrown in. Yes, the rand is extremely weak but considering people still don’t have access to basic sanitation, you have to wonder.
@christophernaze2 жыл бұрын
The only channel where "world" is pronounced "wherold".
@loturzelrestaurant2 жыл бұрын
YOUR WELCOME for me spamming-for-the-sake-of-Visiblity: Some-More-News did Water-Crisis-Coverage and so did Second-Thought. Extremly valueable info.
@christiaan64882 жыл бұрын
Your focus on polulation growth should mention the millions of illegal migrants flocking to Cape Town, and as South Africa has negligible border control, this problem will repeat itself in the near future.
@andrewrossouw2 жыл бұрын
i am still feeling the consequences. Re-using water multiple time (e.g. using washing machine outflow for toilets) has caused calcification of the systems designed for clean water, and they have never returned to their original performance. People who used grey water on gardens now struggle with high salts. We used the same water to shower, wash clothes and then flush toilets... three time use.
@marktwain3682 жыл бұрын
Yes, it seems that every 'solution' has another problem embedded in it. I hope the rains come in their season for SA.
@andrewrossouw2 жыл бұрын
@@marktwain368 yes, we tend to think (due to lack of knowledge of the complexity of infrastructure) in terms of "quick fixes". You believe you are using water better by not diverting it to the sewer, and forget its that flow that is required to transport waste. Dryer sewer = organisms reduce = pipes no longer slippery = poor transport = clogged system. Yes our dams are near full once again. But the fact remains we are too many people depending on limited resources. So it will happen again. So save water even while the dams are full.
@marktwain3682 жыл бұрын
@@andrewrossouw Cheers, Michael!
@tuckerbugeater2 жыл бұрын
@@andrewrossouw Thankfully for weather modification we can bring the world to their knees and keep them in permanent survival mode.
@randallbermudez90212 жыл бұрын
Cape Town needs to build a desalination plant to avoid cape town running out of water.
@resphantom2 жыл бұрын
Or just make the dams deeper and use various methods to avoid rapid evaporation during summer times. It does seem that they do somewhat regulate the water usage by adjusting the water pressing as well which is interesting.
@jameswebster56722 жыл бұрын
Haha. In any other worldwide city would you show the slum in the intro?
@TBJ11182 жыл бұрын
11:30 correction: 1/6 not 6 times
@mtkoslowski2 жыл бұрын
01:35 _”How did Cape Town get to this point?”_ Well you see it first started way back in 1994…
@TheIrieman152 жыл бұрын
Or a few hundred years earlier 🙄
@Hero1010102 жыл бұрын
Demographics is destiny...
@Hero1010102 жыл бұрын
@@TheIrieman15 lol. Lmao
@adriennefloreen2 жыл бұрын
Their water problem was caused by the government and the government should fix it, but the government officials would have to actually care about the people they are oppressing to do so. Obviously they only care about themselves and not about the people - whether the people are white or black or something else, they are simply pawns of the political parties. I saw a documentary a really long time ago about people living in the desert in Israel in a remote area with no water in houses built for them by their government. A really long time ago, like when I was a child watching TV. They had metal coils on their ceilings that collected all the water from the air including steam that escaped while cooking and even their sweat and a system that filtered the water from the air vapor and made it into usable water. What this proves is that governments had solutions to these problems a long time ago and if they haven't implemented them they chose not to. Also, water evaporates in hot deserts quickly. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that. Based on that known fact, a government official could decide to store water in closed tanks not open reservoirs in the middle of a desert. That is just basic logic, based on science, water evaporates. The city also appears to be surrounded by water. Since they didn't build a desalination plant in time before their stored water evaporated, perhaps they could have showed on the news how to desalinate a pot of seawater in your own kitchen and encouraged people to do that. Hey everyone, if you live in a desert by an ocean, look up "how to desalinate a pot of seawater" on the same internet that you are watching this video on.
@stefanvanzyl90902 жыл бұрын
yes all of that, except Cape Town does have a desalination plant, we have 10 of them along the coast of South Africa. And we're in the process of stopping / dismantling them all because they kill the creatures in our oceans due to the increased salt levels, which happen automatically. The salt cannot disappear.
@Bullshitvol22 жыл бұрын
Thats nonsense. You have any idea how expensive it is to store water in closed tanks in any significant amount? Even western cities only have a water storage in encosed tanks for around one day. BTW: A lot of water in 3rd world cities is wasted by leakage of damaged pipes. Some towns in india are losing up to 80% of their drinking water that way. I doubt the water pipes in cape city are maintained properly to actually minimize this loss.
@Bullshitvol22 жыл бұрын
@@stefanvanzyl9090 What is cape town doing with its waste water? The sane way would have been to clean it up and mix it with the brine from the desalination plants. That way the salinity wouldn't increase. Or even better reuse the treated waste water for non essencial things like flushing the toilet and agriculture. Of course a special infrastructure is required for this water management but in such a dry country it would be necessary.
@stefanvanzyl90902 жыл бұрын
@@Bullshitvol2 we have a very good waste water treatment infrastructure, about 70% of water flowing 'into' the city is channeled into the effluent treatment process, of which 16% is then safe enough for use as irrigation and industrial use water. This could potentially be expanded to 35% recovery, however the effluent waste product then also becomes too concentrated to discharge safely into the ocean - we don't have anywhere else to go with the waste... It's also not cost-effective to treat more effluent currently, as the drought is over and our dams overflowing with clean water again. The next big drought will probably catch our national government off-guard again.
@adriennefloreen2 жыл бұрын
@@stefanvanzyl9090 Wow, when I said to get water by desalination I didn't mean "and then dump the salt back into the water right next to the plant killing all sea life." I guess I assumed they didn't do that, because that's nonsensical Ok, I recommend water desalination plants stop doing that. If you are doing that, why? Yes, the salt cannot disappear. But if you are going to dump it in the ocean it should be 1. far from the plant, 2. not only in one place, and 3. diluted with some amount of water that will be further diluted by the ocean at levels that will not harm sea life. Obviously solving a problem with a problem isn't a solution, and in fact the solution is a solution - a diluted one. Also, someone is making money off this whole situation, that money could pay for water storage tanks or better plants, for sure. Follow the money, find where it leads.
@donaldaxel2 жыл бұрын
I thought you would mention the research in desalinification. The area has so much sun that even just saline-basins evaporating into dew-gathering devices could be a bit of help; but in emergency, today there exist ways to get more water by desalification processes. Reverse Osmosis: The leading process for desalination in terms of installed capacity and yearly growth is reverse osmosis (RO). The RO membrane processes use semipermeable membranes and applied pressure (on the membrane feed side) to preferentially induce water permeation through the membrane while rejecting salts. Reverse osmosis plant membrane systems typically use less energy than thermal desalination processes ... The Ras Al-Khair Power and Desalination Plant is a power and desalination plant located in Ras Al-Khair on the eastern coast of Saudi Arabia. -- The plant includes five high-efficiency gas turbines operated in combined cycle mode and in single mode.[5] It uses a hybrid system of eight multi-stage flashing units and 17 reverse osmosis units.[11] Freshwater output from the plant is pumped via pipelines to Riyadh and Hafr Al-Batin. Pronunciation: Apart-heit (maybe inadvertently you say apar - theid).
@wolraadwoltemade32752 жыл бұрын
Apartheid is the word given to it by the political opposition, it was called Seperate Development
@donaldaxel2 жыл бұрын
@@wolraadwoltemade3275 Yes that is why I added a hyphen: Apart == they are not together, they are separate, the ethnic groups. (And the speak says "Apar - theid" which is totally illogical and wrong).