Nelson Mandela Bay struggles with water leaks and budget shortfalls

Nelson Mandela Bay metro is contending with roughly 7,000 active water leaks in its aging pipelines despite full dams following recent rains. Officials reported on 21 May 2026 that limited maintenance funding threatens to halt repairs.

Executive director for infrastructure and engineering Joseph Tsatsire told councillors that the city lacks resources to address its 4,700km of decaying pipelines. A water loss strategy estimated at R1.3-billion has received no meaningful budget allocation, leaving three appointed contractors without work orders.

The infrastructure and engineering directorate operates with a R3.4-million budget, of which R370,000 is earmarked for repairs and maintenance. Only 27 percent of the total budget and 62 percent of the maintenance allocation have been spent so far, prompting concerns from councillors across parties about under-expenditure.

Councillors noted that a private firm and a young proposer offered leak-detection solutions but were not engaged. They also highlighted service disruptions, including week-long water shortages affecting Soqhayisa High School in Motherwell.

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South Africa’s water sector lost nearly R19 billion in 2023/24 due to leaks, illegal connections and billing issues, Auditor-General Tsakani Maluleke’s report reveals. With 47% of treated water wasted before reaching users amid ageing infrastructure and governance failures, the findings underscore the urgency behind the National Water Crisis Committee launched in February.

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eThekwini municipality in Durban and Mangaung in Bloemfontein have the highest rates of water loss in South Africa, with over 40% of purified tap water going to waste annually. Data from the Department of Water and Sanitation shows eThekwini loses 40.4% to physical leaks, the largest volume nationwide. Mangaung's rate stands at 41.2%.

Nelson Mandela Bay has been hit by its third major power outage in recent months, following collapses in August 2024 and January 2026. A transmission pylon on the Chelsea-Arlington-Walmer-Summerstrand line fell due to gale-force winds, leaving large parts of Gqeberha without electricity for up to 21 days.

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The seventh high-voltage pylon collapse in less than two years struck Nelson Mandela Bay on Tuesday along the Chelsea-Summerstrand-Arlington 132kV line, causing outages across nearly half of Gqeberha, including Summerstrand and Walmer. Amid a decade of warnings about corroded coastal infrastructure, officials estimate R35-million for upgrades, with repairs underway using new monopoles but full timelines unclear.

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