Johannesburg water outages continue despite recent reservoir project

Residents in Johannesburg continue to face water shortages weeks after the commissioning of the Brixton Reservoir and Water Tower. A senior parliamentarian has highlighted governance and budget issues behind the recurring disruptions.

Johannesburg has experienced repeated water outages in areas including Brixton, Coronationville, Melville and Midrand. These followed Rand Water’s winter maintenance programme and occurred shortly after the Gauteng premier highlighted the new Brixton facility as a source of relief.

Leon Basson, chairperson of the Portfolio Committee on Water and Sanitation, noted that the city cut Joburg Water’s budget by R201 million for the 2025/26 financial year. He also pointed to 44.7 percent non-revenue water losses costing an estimated R3.8 billion annually and more than R650 million spent on water tankers over five years.

Basson stated that years of deferred maintenance have left infrastructure unable to handle planned work without widespread interruptions. He called for greater accountability rather than further announcements.

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Johannesburg officials opened the new Brixton reservoir and tower this week, a year behind schedule. The project improves water pressure in the Commando system but leaves 43 other reservoirs still leaking across the city.

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Amid Johannesburg's ongoing water crisis—including a February confrontation at the site—the City launched the Brixton Reservoir and Water Tower on 29 April 2026, boosting storage capacity. Officials praised it as progress toward reliable supply, while critics highlighted persistent leaks, delays, and unproven resilience during outages.

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