AT A borehole not far from Mpopoma High School in Bulawayo, Zimbabwe’s second largest city, 48-year-old Sakhile Mulawuzi balances a white 25-litre bucket of water on her head as she holds another 10-litre blue bucket filled with water.
She trudges these back home along a narrow pathway leading to her house in Mpopoma, one of the high-density areas here.
Similarly, in Masvingo, Zimbabwe’s oldest town, 30-year-old Ruramai Chinoda stands at her neighbour’s house in Rujeko high-density suburb, where she fetches water from a tap because her neighbour has a borehole and shares the precious liquid with the community.
Nearly 300 kilometres north of Masvingo, 43-year-old Nevias Chaurura, a pushcart operator in Mabvuku high-density suburb in the Zimbabwean capital Harare, struggles with a load of eight 20-litre buckets. He delivers them from door-to-door for a minimal fee as many city dwellers battle to find water
These ongoing water shortages are blamed on a lack of planning and the ongoing El Niño drought. If the residents were hoping for a change in weather conditions, a report released today (Wednesday, December 11, 2024) by the World Meteorological Organization suggests that while the cooling La Niña climate pattern may develop in the next three months, it is expected to be relatively weak and short-lived.
Latest forecasts from WMO Global Producing Centres of Long-Range Forecasts indicate a 55 percent likelihood of a transition from the current neutral conditions (neither El Niño nor La Niña) to La Nina conditions during December 2024 to February 2025, the WMO explains.
The return of the ENSO-neutral conditions is then favored during February-April 2025, with about a 55 percent chance. La Niña refers to the large-scale cooling of the ocean surface temperatures in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific Ocean, coupled with changes in the tropical atmospheric circulation, such as winds, pressure and rainfall.
Generally, La Niña produces the opposite large-scale climate impacts to El Niño, especially in tropical regions. “However, naturally occurring climate events such as La Nina and El Nino events are taking place in the broader context of human-induced climate change, which is increasing global temperatures, exacerbating extreme weather and climate, and impacting seasonal rainfall and temperature patterns,” the WMO warns.
WMO secretary-general Celeste Saulo said 2024, which started out with El Niño, is on track to be the hottest year on record. “Even if a La Niña event does emerge, its short-term cooling impact will be insufficient to counterbalance the warming effect of record heattrapping greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,” said Saulo.
“Even in the absence of El Niño or La Niña conditions since May, we have witnessed an extraordinary series of extreme weather events, including recordbreaking rainfall and flooding, which have unfortunately become the new norm in our changing climate.” Zimbabwe is one of six countries that declared a state of emergency over the El Niño-induced drought, which resulted in the lowest mid-season rainfall in 40 years.
The weather phenomenon also resulted in intense rain in other regions. “These severe weather shocks have led to the displacement of thousands of people, disease outbreaks, food shortages, water scarcity and significant impacts on agriculture,” according to the organization OCHA.
Zimbabwean residents blame the water shortages on both the weather and bad planning. Mulawuzi said for nearly two decades, she has lived with the crisis in the country’s second-largest city and as residents, they have only learnt to live with the challenge and ignore the promises from politicians to end the city’s perennial water crisis over the years.
Each election time, politicians from the governing Zanu PF have pledged to end Bulawayo’s water woes by working on the Zambezi water pipeline project meant to end the city’s water challenges. However, since the country’s colonial government laid out the plan more than a century ago, the project has not been implemented.
A 450-kilometre pipeline to bring water from the Zambezi River to Bulawayo was first proposed in 1912 by this country’s colonial government. Then, like now, the Matabeleland Zambezi Water Project (MZWP) aimed to address the region’s chronic water shortages and to promote socio-economic growth.
Now, water-starved residents of Bulawayo, like Mulawuzi, are forced to endure the accelerated water rationing that has hit the city, lasting at times for nearly a week. “I have no choice for as long as there is no running water on our taps but to go around some boreholes here in search of the water for my family,” Mulawuzi, a mother of four, told IPS.
When Bulawayo residents, like Mulawuzi, are lucky to have access to water, people in high-density suburbs are now limited to 350 litres of water per day, reduced from 450 litres. In Bulawayo’s low-density areas, the affluent residents are restricted to 550 litres, down from 650 litres of water when supplied by the council.
In Harare, life has become a gamble for many urbanites like Chaurura, who has now turned the drought into a money-making venture. “People have no water in their houses and I made a plan to fetch it from boreholes and wells far from the residents and sell it to them. I get a dollar for each 40 litres of water I sell and I make sure I get busy throughout the day,” Chaurura told IPS.
The El Niño drought has resulted in major lakes and dams supplying water in urban areas running low across Zimbabwe, triggering an acute water crisis in towns and cities. According to the Zimbabwe National Water Authority, most of the dams supplying water to Bulawayo are dangerously low—the Inyakuni is at 9 percent, the Insiza at 36,5 percent, the Lower Ncema at 5,9 percent and the Upper Ncema at 1,7 percent.
The city is currently under a 120-hour water shedding program due to the reduced inflows from the 2023/24 rainy season. In Harare, where many like Chaurura now thrive making money from the crisis, urban residents commonly move around carrying buckets in search of water. They form long and winding queues at the few water points erected by Good Samaritans.
Some, like 37-year-old Jimson Beta working in the Central Business District, where he fixes mobile phones, now carry empty five-litre containers to work. “After work, I always fetch water to carry with me back home because there is often no running water where I live with my family. It only comes once a week. We have become used to this problem, which is not normal at all,” Beta told IPS.
For people like Beta, the water situation in the capital Harare has not improved either, even as authorities in government have drilled boreholes to address the crisis. Just last year, in October, the Zimbabwean government appointed a 19-member technical committee to manage the City of Harare’s water affairs as part of efforts to improve the availability of the precious liquid across the city.
Despite that move, water deficits have continued to pound Harare rather mercilessly and many, like Beta, have had to bear the pain of finding the precious liquid almost every day on their own. — IPS