Zimbabwe Farm Project

 

 

 

 

Zimbabwe: Boost for Bulawayo Water Supply

 


 

BULAWAYO water supplies will improve in five months when the Zimbabwe National Water Authority concludes the Epping Forest Project. The project will see water supplies to the city increasing by an additional 10 mega litres daily. Bulawayo needs about 135 mega litres a day, but is getting an average of 90 mega litres per day.ZinwaGwayi catchment manager Engineer ChengetoGozo said the Epping Forest project contractor was now on site.

"This project is part of the greater Nyamandlovu aquifer water supply managed by Zinwa. Currently, we are getting insufficient water from Rochester Farm in Nyamandlovu for Bulawayo amid the current water crisis," he said.

EngGozo said the completion of the project would alleviate the water crisis given that the other alternative sources of water for Bulawayo were drying up.

"When plans were made to expand the project from Rochester to Epping Forest Farm, our challenge was funding. We discussed with the city of Bulawayo and they agreed to fund it," he said.

EngGozo said the project was divided into two segments, Slot A which involves the setting up of pumps and Slot B where they would drill boreholes.

"The project is supposed to take six months and we expect to complete the project in the next five months. We are getting into the second month of the project and when we complete the two phases we will then start drawing water from the boreholes to a station and then to the city of Bulawayo reservoirs," said EngGozo.

Last year in April, council director of Engineering Services Engineer SimelaDube said the Epping Forest Project needed an estimated $4 million to complete.

"Council had passed a resolution and agreed to partner Government through Zinwa and contribute towards the cost of implementing this project. Letters have been written to the Ministry of Local Government, Public Works and National Housing to facilitate the project," EngDube said.

Bulawayo councillors on Thursday rejected a revised 72-hour water shedding schedule which was announced on Monday, saying council management implemented it without their input.

Resource

 

The Zimbabwe Farm Project is a lean startup, small development project founded in 2015 to sow into the lives of others. Capitalized from the proceeds of my work as an IT consultant, this project was envisioned as a proof of concept to prove the viability of a non-traditional aid model. The objective of this project is to strengthen its beneficiaries through partnerships versus dependency, since ultimately this is the only path to self-sufficiency, empowerment, self-determination, and freedom.