Taps have run dry across South Africa's largest city in an unprecedented water crisis

What we all have to look forward to in the near future

For two weeks, Tsholofelo Moloi has been among thousands of South Africans lining up for water as the country’s largest city, Johannesburg, confronts an unprecedented collapse of its water system affecting millions of people.

Residents rich and poor have never seen a shortage of this severity. While hot weather has shrunk reservoirs, crumbling infrastructure after decades of neglect is also largely to blame. The public’s frustration is a danger sign for the ruling African National Congress, whose comfortable hold on power since the end of apartheid in the 1990s faces its most serious challenge in an election this year.

A country already famous for its hourslong electricity shortages is now adopting a term called “watershedding” — the practice of going without water, from the term loadshedding, or the practice of going without power.

SlopppyEngineer,

The climate report says more heat waves, drought, fire and flooding. Their misery is just beginning.

It’s kinda like South Europe. We know climate change will turn part of Spain, Greece and Italy into deserts. It’s only a question of how much.

Wanderer,

Has South Africa done anything since Apatheid other than make the party cronies rich obviously?

Every news report I see talks about how the country is clinging on to something the National party did.

dubyakay,

I’ve seen something pretty enlightening on this topic:

youtu.be/Iiny1GrfhYM

girlfreddy,
@girlfreddy@lemmy.ca avatar

That was educational. Thanks for posting it.

Syntha,

They also tried to host Putin while he was being wanted for war crimes despite them being a signatory of the ICC

TokenBoomer,

Maybe unlimited market growth was a bad idea?

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