Cape Town, one of the world’s favorite tourist cities, can count on its clout to draw attention to its water woes—other South African cities can't.
The crisis of our diminishing water resources is just as severe (if less obviously immediate) as any wartime crisis we have ever faced. Our survival is just as much at stake as it was at the time of Pearl Harbor, or the Argonne, or Gettysburg, or Saratoga.
With the ever-expanding population requiring more food and water for daily needs, usable water is being exhausted. In regions like India and Africa, water is scarce and clean water is even scarcer. When one takes into account the agricultural, industrial, and mankind's water consumption, soon the wo.
Tell students they will be viewing a photo essay that depicts the town of Flint, Michigan, and its residents who have been severely impacted by a water crisis since 2014. Before viewing the photo essay, ask students to read Matt Black's statement.
Recent discoveries of water reserves under some of Africa’s mightiest deserts raise hopes for quenching African thirst. But the reality is much more grim. From parched desert to tropical forest, roughly 40 percent of Africans, mostly the rural poor, will not get access to clean water any time soon, a fact that exacerbates poverty, hunger, and disease.
Water quality is defined as water which is safe, drinkable and appealing to all life on earth. In South Africa the scarce fresh water is decreasing in quality because of an increase in pollution and the destruction of river catchments, caused by urbanisation, deforestation, damming of rivers, destruction of wetlands, industry, mining, agriculture, energy use and accidental water pollution.
The Cape Town water crisis in South Africa was a period of severe water shortage in the Western Cape region, most notably affecting the City of Cape Town.While dam water levels had been declining since 2015, the Cape Town water crisis peaked during mid-2017 to mid-2018 when water levels hovered between 15 and 30 per cent of total dam capacity.