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Following a media briefing held earlier today where the City of Cape Town shared updated information and projections for the coming months, data shows that:
Dam levels are currently sitting at just over 55%, around 19% lower than the same time last year. While there is no immediate threat to supply, the system is entering a more sensitive period ahead of winter rainfall.
The ‘Early Drought Caution’, as per the City’s Drought Management Framework, is an early warning phase that reflects lower-than-expected dam levels and signals the need for continued careful use of water, even though taps are running normally.
Unfortunately, daily water use is relentlessly high and spiked to 1073 million litres per day this past Monday, with average per person consumption at around 178 litres per person per day. Although summer demand is expected to be higher, sustained high usage at this level reduces savings in the system before unpredictable winter rainfall replenishment.
Residents saving water at a household level is now essential to reducing collective consumption and returning our status to below the 975MLD mark.
What the projections show
Updated projections raise concerns about how dam levels will be impacted over the next few months if high water use trends continue and rainfall is low to average.
Put simply: what happens between now and May really matters.
Small changes in water use over the next few weeks can still shift the curve, keeping dams fuller. If demand is reduced, the system retains more flexibility going into winter. If demand remains high, the City’s options narrow and the likelihood of restrictions increases.
Early action to avoid harder measures later
‘The City’s approach is to act early, based on risk, rather than wait for crisis conditions. The Drought Management Framework flags when behaviour change can still make a meaningful difference.
‘Water restrictions are not a punishment. They are a tool to protect supply when risk becomes too high to ignore. The projections show that early, moderate demand management now can help avoid more severe restrictions later, when there is far less room to manoeuvre.
‘Team Cape Town, we still have a window to change the outcome of this winter, but that window is closing. If we use water wisely now, we can protect the system and avoid tough restrictions later. If we wait until the dams are much lower, our options become limited and the measures we need to introduce become far more disruptive.
‘Cape Town is not facing an immediate drought, emergency but dam levels are about 20% lower than last year and the system is entering a phase where early choices will shape the months ahead,’ said Councillor Zahid Badroodien, Mayoral Committee Member for Water and Sanitation.

The City’s key initiatives to reduce water loss
Since the drought, the City has continued to proactively invest in these actions:
Annually upgrading aged water pipes
Finding and fixing leaks annually
In 2024/25 financial year
Clearing alien invasive plant species
Aquifers (groundwater schemes)
Improving pressure management

Long-term plans to build Cape Town’s water future
The City is proactively investing and progressing with strategic plans for Cape Town’s new water supply to build our water secure future, which aims to add 300 million litres a day to our water supply from 2031.
Updates on these projects:
*The City is forging ahead with plans to begin procurement for the Faure New Water Scheme (FNWS) for water reuse and the Paarden Eiland Desalination Plant using a Public-Private Partnership (PPP) model. See
For water saving tips, visit the City's website.
See the City’s action plan to be water-wise and build Cape Town’s water secure future.
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