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Crisis worse than loadshedding: 86% of sewage treatment plants release polluted water into rivers, new AfriForum report finds

Marais de Vaal (English)

Although a large percentage of samples taken of municipal drinking water is safe for human consumption, the fact remains that a staggering 94 out of 109 (86%) sewage treatment plants release effluent that is still polluted with sewage into water sources. These alarming findings in AfriForum’s latest water quality watch report, released today, clearly show that while the country’s water system appears to be stable on the surface, the sewage in dams and rivers undermine the foundation of water security in South-Africa.

AfriForum’s 2025 water quality watch report was compiled by testing municipal drinking water and treated sewage samples collected during August by the organisation’s network of 160 branches. Out of the water samples taken from 175 towns and cities, 88% produced water that is safe for human consumption. These findings are similar to that which was recorded in 2024 (87% compliance). However, only 14% of sewage treatment plants produced effluent clean enough to safely discharge into the environment.

“The seeming stability of drinking water quality is nothing to celebrate. It teeters on an increasingly fragile footing that conceals a serious breakdown in the rest of the system,” Marais de Vaal, AfriForum’s Advisor for Environmental Affairs, explains.

“While most municipalities still manage to keep drinking water within legal limits, the overwhelming failures of sewage treatment plants mean that the rivers and dams that supply this water is being polluted on a massive scale. Provinces such as the Free State and the Eastern Cape have not produced a single instance of adequately treated sewage effluent in AfriForum’s tests over the past five years.”

Even the Auditor-General’s report on water services authorities’ compliance with legal obligations for the 2023/2024 financial year, that was tabled in Parliament last week, highlights the consequences of poor water management. It found that 99% of wastewater treatment works failed at least one effluent quality standard and that this untreated wastewater harms ecosystems, impacts health and the quality of drinking water.

De Vaal says these findings reflect the ongoing institutional failures of municipalities, who focus what little budget they have on keeping tap water compliant because the consequences of failure are immediate and visible. Everything in the value chain beyond a water treatment plant, including ageing pipes; the condition of pumping stations and reservoirs; and especially sewage treatment and the protection of water sources, is left to deteriorate. The result is nothing more than a dangerous reality hidden under the pretence of service delivery.

“This approach is dangerous and unsustainable,” De Vaal warns. “The current compliance rate for drinking water still means one in eight people with access to municipal tap water may have been exposed to unsafe drinking water in 2025. It also leaves the broader society to bear the consequences of polluted rivers and dams that must support domestic use, industry, agriculture and food production.”

Drawing on AfriForum’s analysis of the Water Services Amendment Bill, De Vaal argues that the crisis is rooted not in a lack of legislation but in the absence of basic governance. “Water and sanitation systems collapse where there is no maintenance, no technical skills and no consequence for failure. The Bill tries to fix these chronic operational, financial and procurement failures, but ignores the fact that some municipalities already provide safe drinking water and treated effluent within the current legal framework. Reversing the decline does not require more paperwork. It requires competence and accountability.”

The disastrous extent of this underlying municipal governance failure is also revealed in shocking detail in the Auditor General’s report. According to the report 26% of municipalities have no water services development plans; average maintenance spending sits at only 3% of municipalities’ asset value, well below the global benchmark of 8%; 30 municipalities have no maintenance plans whatsoever; and 82% of water infrastructure projects experienced delays.

“The quality of drinking water ultimately depends on the condition of the natural sources from which it is drawn. When water treatment plants abstract water from rivers and dams polluted by sewage, their ability to supply clean water declines drastically. The cost of treating increasingly polluted water also rises, as shown by recent reports from water boards that expect bulk water tariffs to increase by 10% or more next year – costs that municipalities will inevitably pass on to consumers. If this trajectory continues, the water crisis will surpass the energy crisis,” says De Vaal.

AfriForum emphasises that communities must take a prominent role in safeguarding their own water security. Government has shown that it cannot solve this crisis on its own. Communities must become active custodians of the systems that sustain them. AfriForum’s water quality watch report gives communities the evidence they need to monitor, report on and challenge the failures that put public health at risk.

Background:

AfriForum’s 2025 water quality watch report, formerly known as the blue and green drop report, fulfils a crucial watchdog role that exposes failing systems and holds underperforming authorities to account. This is the 13th year that AfriForum has conducted independent nationwide water testing to give the public reliable information on the state of municipal drinking water and sewage treatment.

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