
Deadly Mthatha flood underscores worsening factors increasing risks for SA
After the devastating and deadly flooding that hit Mthatha and other parts of the Eastern Cape last week, people are still searching for missing loved ones, particularly children, and trying to salvage their belongings and homes.
Mussa AjiDa said that they were still searching for his child, Simbongile, who went missing after the school transport Simbongile was travelling in was swept up in the Mthatha flooding on Tuesday, 10 June 2025.
AjiDa was forlorn and exhausted when he spoke to Daily Maverick. Simbongile had still not been found, more than a week after 13 learners were swept away in the devastating scholar transport disaster. AjiDa said the search would continue until Simbongile had been found.
This is just one among several cases playing out as South Africa responds to this most recent flooding incident, driven by heavy rainfall in a cut-off low weather system.
Minister of Human Settlements Thembi Simelane confirmed on SAfm on Wednesday, 18 June that on top of the 90 lives lost – including learners from the tragic scholar transport incident – almost 1,600 structures and 5,000 people had been affected by the recent Eastern Cape floods.
The immediate priority, she said, was to provide alternative accommodation to allow people to rebuild. But a significant challenge is the availability of suitable land, as many of the destroyed homes were built in unsafe areas too close to the Mthatha River, where rebuilding is not an option.
President Cyril Ramaphosa promised last week that the government would assist those affected and provide shelter after entire homes were submerged and washed away.
Year after year, parts of South Africa undergo significant flooding, wreaking havoc on housing, infrastructure, the environment and lives as the nation and communities attempt to build more resilient and responsive systems.
Increasing trend of weather extremes
Dr Stefaan Conradie, a climate science lecturer at the UCT Climate System Analysis Group, told Daily Maverick that recent flooding attribution studies suggest that rainfall from the cut-off low weather system along the east coast was probably becoming more intense due to climate change.
In other words, climate change is likely exacerbating rainfall and causing devastating flooding in eastern South Africa. This was evidenced by the World Weather Attribution study on the 2022 KwaZulu-Natal floods.
South African Weather Service (Saws) meteorologist and weather forecaster Lehlohonolo Thobela told Daily Maverick that there was an increasing trend of weather extremes over the central and eastern parts of the country, especially with many adverse weather conditions linked to heavy rainfall affecting KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape.
In this case, an intense cut-off low weather system developed in the upper atmosphere on Sunday, 8 June, as forecast by Saws. Conradie said that as it moved across the eastern escarpment and south-east coast, a very intense surface low-pressure system developed roughly beneath it.
This drove extremely strong winds that also transported a lot of moisture off the still relatively warm Agulhas Current region.
'Extremely heavy rainfall and destructive wind gusts resulted, particularly in the early hours of Tuesday, 10 Jun, over the eastern parts of the Eastern Cape,' said Conradie
Multiple intersecting factors result in these kinds of disasters; weather and climate are only one aspect of that landscape.
'The adverse weather conditions in the Eastern Cape were because of the cut-off low that began by affecting the Western Cape and the Northern Cape from 7 June 2025. The weather system progressed to the eastern parts of the country and started to cause havoc over the Eastern Cape from 9-10 June 2025, Monday and Tuesday. The adverse weather conditions lasted for the week, with the emergency teams still helping. The weather system exited the area by Wednesday, 11 June 2025,' said Thobela.
The areas over the central and eastern half of the Eastern Cape that were hit the hardest, recorded more than 50mm of rainfall water depth in 24 hours – Mthatha recorded 149mm, Port Alfred recorded 51.6mm and Makhanda (formerly Grahamstown) recorded 93.6 mm.
But rainfall was not the only factor that escalated the disaster. Following an assessment by the Department of Water and Sanitation, engineers determined that the Mthatha flooding was exacerbated by two simultaneous events.
On Monday, 9 June 2025, the Mthatha Dam was already at 99.8% capacity before sudden upstream rains raised its level to 102% by midnight, causing it to spill. At the same time, the Cicira River tributary, located downstream from the dam, was also experiencing flash floods.
The department said that it was this combination of the dam's spillage and the heavy, independent flow from the flooded tributary that caused the Mthatha River to overflow its banks.
Floods most common disasters in SA and Africa
A recent study, published in May 2025, analysing weather-related disasters in South Africa from 1980 to 2023, found that floods and storms are the most common disasters in the country, with the highest number of incidents reported in KwaZulu-Natal.
The research, which used the Emergency Events Database, also identified the primary weather systems driving these events.
It was conducted by researchers from the University of Pretoria, the Global Change Institute at the University of Witwatersrand, the University of Limpopo, the South African Weather Service and others.
Their analysis revealed that the eThekwini metropolitan municipality in KwaZulu-Natal recorded the most disasters during this period, while the Cape Town metropolitan area had the highest number in the western region of South Africa. In Gauteng, the most populous province in the country, Johannesburg saw the highest number of floods, and Ekurhuleni had the most storms.
This aligns with what has been experienced across the continent – flooding has been the leading natural disaster in African countries for decades.
The study found that floods were the most reported disaster type, with 49 occurrences, followed by storms with 33. Droughts and wildfires were the next most common, with 11 and 10 events, respectively.
When it comes to the geographic distribution of these, the eastern part of South Africa, particularly KwaZulu-Natal, experienced the highest frequency of both floods and storms. The Cape Town metro was a hotspot for droughts.
When it came to what has been driving the weather systems causing these, the study linked flood and storm disasters to eight types of synoptic weather systems.
Cut-off lows were the most significant, causing 48 of the reported disasters. Upper troughs were the second most influential, responsible for 15 disasters. Ex-tropical cyclones were linked to four disasters during the 43-year period.
Cut-off lows were also responsible for the Heritage Day floods in Cape Town in 2023 and the Nelson Mandela Bay floods of April and June 2024.
The researchers found that the concentration of disasters in metropolitan areas such as eThekwini and Cape Town suggests that human factors such as urbanisation may amplify the impacts of extreme weather events.
The research was based on data from the Emergency Events Database, which has specific criteria for including an event, such as 10 or more deaths, 100 or more people affected, a declaration of a state of emergency, or a call for international assistance.
The authors noted that while their study provided a comprehensive overview, the reliance on the Emergency Events Database could lead to an underestimation of disaster events, particularly in rural areas where reporting may be less consistent.
The study concluded that mid-latitude, mid-tropospheric systems were the primary drivers of flood and storm disasters in South Africa; it is hoped that these findings enhance the understanding of weather-related disaster risks in South Africa for better climate resilience and proactive disaster management.
Thobela said the most important lesson they were learning was to make sure there was better communication with the affected communities and to make sure that there were more community engagements that taught about being proactive about weather warnings, rather than reactive. DM

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Daily Maverick
3 days ago
- Daily Maverick
Joburg power crisis — almost 100,000 reported outages in 9 months, 5,126 very serious
Africa's powerhouse city is going back to the Dark Ages after decades of post-apartheid electrification gains. A Johannesburg power data investigation by Daily Maverick has found a total of 97,715 reported power outages in nine months – with more than 5,126 serious enough to take out entire suburbs at once. This is the first independent attempt to put a number on the scale of Johannesburg's power crisis placing South Africa's economic powerhouse at risk. We began tabulating quarterly reports from City Power from July 2024 to the end of March 2025. The key finding: serious high-voltage and medium-voltage outages are getting worse as the grid reaches its end of life. As we reported the impact of outages on people's lives, a few trends became clear: citizens and residents are turning to old forms of energy such as paraffin and petrol because solar is still too expensive for most. Business margins of the vital small and medium-sized hustle businesses so important to national growth are seeing their margins chopped because they must buy expensive inverters and generators to keep going. Many are shutting shop, laying off people or not expanding because they can't afford to hire more staff even where there is demand. Kabelo, a resident and a student at The Finishing College in Braamfontein who runs a business in Vlakfontein, said: 'The power outages are very bad, hey, because literally every time it starts raining, or it rains, or it gets a little windy, the lights go. They're gone for days. It's not a few hours – it's four to six days at a time. Food rots and there's no water to bathe. It's stressful for everybody. Most houses here have gas stoves, or primer stoves that use paraffin, and others light a fire to boil water to bathe or to cook. It's really hard. Imagine getting up in the morning to go and look for wood for a fire. As a student, it's bad, because you have to do schoolwork. 'Without WiFi the (mobile phone) towers go down and the network is bad. I can't complete my assignments, so I have to do everything there in Braamfontein, and catch late transport back home again.' This city-level energy crisis emerges as Electricity Minister Kgosientsho Ramokgopa finally gets a grip on national load shedding. The impact of the city's outages is significant because Johannesburg is still responsible for 16% of national GDP. The chart shows that from July 2024 to the end of March 2025 there were 97,715 reported outages – the absolute total may be lower because some might be reported more than once. Even half that number would be cripplingly high. Daily Maverick added a second level of data extraction from municipal distributor City Power's social media posts and found that from December 2024 to the end of February 2025 there were 5,126 outages serious enough for the utility to report publicly. It can't report all outages because there are too many. The mass of outages are so-called low-voltage outages and affect individual homes or a single street or a few properties. The medium-voltage outages are increasing: these affect an entire suburb or even many suburbs at once. These are caused by faults in larger powerlines or mini substations, distributors or transformer substations that supply 20 to 30 households or more. These are now an everyday standard across Johannesburg and are disempowering residents from the north to the south and east to west of the city. The age of the grid and the general decline are clear when you look at how outages are spread fairly evenly across the different distributing centres: Alexandra, Hursthill, Inner City, Lenasia, Midrand, Randburg, Reuven and Roodepoort. Soweto and other smaller parts of Johannesburg are serviced by Eskom and experience as many outages. As the utility – which is R15-billion in overdraft carried by the City, with many more billions in debt – runs out of cash, it can't hold stock and must buy on demand. This means outages last longer. South Africa's leading energy expert, Chris Yelland of EE Publishers, said municipal outages are getting longer. '(The outages) are exceptionally high by global standards,' he said. As we hit the city to report, many people said that multi-day or full-day outages are common now. 'City Power is particularly hard hit because it's in a dire financial state. If you don't have money, you can't carry spares.' Yelland said suppliers hesitated to do business with Johannesburg's electricity utility because it didn't pay efficiently. He said City Power was extending terms to 30, 60, 90 or even 120 days' credit and now suppliers wanted bank guarantees first. All of this extended outage times. 'We're talking about mini-transformers, cables, switch-gear, mini substations, electricity metering equipment…' The small and medium-sized suppliers couldn't fund supplies on 120-day credit lines. 'It's on the verge of a tipping point,' said Yelland who explained that because municipalities make up 50% of Eskom's sales, their non-payments were existential. Because people can't afford their bills, debt owed by municipalities to Eskom is growing at R3-billion a month and has now overshot a total of R100-billion. This in turn threatens Eskom's viability, Ramokgopa said when he announced a deal for City Power to pay off old debt owed to Eskom over four years. City Power also owes Eskom R3.2-billion, according to a recent settlement mediated by the minister, which will be paid off over four years. City Power: Soaring outages are not a crisis – yet Question: The Q3 report from City Power shows that in three months there were 29,084 low-voltage outages, 1,335 medium-voltage outages and 86 high-voltage outages between January and March 2025. This builds on a picture of massive outages across the city that are largely unrecognised in the public discourse. Would you classify this as a crisis? If not, could you explain why not? Answer: The figures reflect significant pressure on the electricity network. However, City Power does not classify the situation as a crisis. This is because a single outage may affect multiple customers who each log the fault separately, and sometimes repeatedly. In line with Nersa regulations, each logged call must be reported individually, even if it relates to the same high number of outage calls results from a range of factors, including consumer-related faults, equipment failures, overloads and incidents caused by third parties. Ageing infrastructure – especially in areas like Roodepoort, Randburg, Hursthill, the Inner City and Reuven – also contributes to system failures. While City Power prioritises replacing old infrastructure with advanced technology during repairs, progress is constrained by a R40-billion infrastructure backlog and limited funding (for example, only R1.2-billion allocated last year).Severe weather at the start of the year compounded the problem. Heavy rain, flooding and uprooted trees caused widespread damage, especially to underground cables. Moisture intrusion led to insulation failures and hampered testing and repair efforts. Vandalism of mini substations made things worse under these conditions. For example, in Roodepoort, a mini substation exploded after water damage and had to be replaced. Q: Has City Power undertaken impact studies on how this affects residents and businesses? A: Yes. City Power conducts regular service-level impact assessments aligned with the Joburg IDP. These inform initiatives like Energy Relief Packages and the Just Energy Transition Plan. Our 2025 Customer Satisfaction Baseline Survey confirmed a link between outages and increased household spending on alternative energy. We also track plant outages and infrastructure performance daily and conduct impact assessments to guide future investment. Q: Our reporting shows that communities across geographic and economic lines are turning to costly and risky alternatives like paraffin and generators. What's your view? A: We recognise the safety and cost concerns associated with these alternatives. They are neither ideal nor sustainable. City Power is working to reduce this dependence by expanding embedded generation, managing demand and rolling out smart meters under our Just Energy Transition Strategy. Q: Given the city's high consultancy spend (as reported in News24), what does the medium-term picture look like? A: The consultancy spend supports the need for specialised skills to modernise Johannesburg's energy system. The medium-term outlook includes stabilising the grid through capital investment, digitalisation of asset management and integrating independent power producers. These efforts are essential, not superficial. Q: Is City Power struggling to access spare parts due to high levels of debt? A: Nonpayment for electricity impacts our ability to fund infrastructure and maintain stock of spares. While we've experienced procurement delays, improved supply chain controls and vendor payment acceleration have helped. We're also seeing positive results from better meter reading and audit systems. Q: A Daily Maverick count based on City Power's social media suggests far fewer outages than in your reports. Why the discrepancy? A: Our social media only reports major high-voltage and medium-voltage outages for public awareness. Most outages (low voltage) are recorded internally via our Outage Management System, SCADA, and call centre logs. Daily internal reports track all MV outages across our Service Delivery Centres. Real-time updates are also shared via WhatsApp groups, ward councillors and social media, but these represent only a portion of total outages. DM This investigation was produced with the support of the SA | AJP, an initiative of the Henry Nxumalo Foundation funded by the European Union. This article does not necessarily reflect the views of the European Union.


Daily Maverick
5 days ago
- Daily Maverick
WMO report reveals urgent need for action against rising dust storms in Southern Africa
A new World Meteorological Organization report warns of the exacting toll that sand and dust storms are having on global health and economies. The report pinpoints South Africa's West Coast as a dust hotspot, with some of the highest concentrations in the southern hemisphere. Have you ever noticed a hazy sky, felt grit in the air, or seen a wall of dust approaching while on the West Coast? These are all signs of airborne dust, a natural phenomenon that is increasingly being influenced by human activities and climate change. The World Meteorological Organization (WMO) recently released its Airborne Dust Bulletin, providing a global overview of airborne dust in 2024. This report, along with other recent findings, offers insights into how dust storms affect our health, economies and environment, with significant implications for countries like South Africa. Key findings from the 2015 WMO Airborne Dust Bulletin, its ninth, are that sand and dust storms now affect about 330 million people in 150 countries; there is increasing economic disruption and health impacts from this; and poor land and water management, as well as drought, play a major role in this. Global sand and dust storm hotspots in 2024 Dust is a natural part of our planet's system, but the WMO has emphasised in its latest bulletin that human factors are playing an increasingly significant role in its prevalence. Poor land and water management, ongoing droughts and general environmental degradation are making the problem worse. As WMO secretary-general Celeste Saulo puts it: 'Sand and dust storms do not just mean dirty windows and hazy skies. They harm the health and quality of life of millions of people and cost many millions of dollars through disruption to air and ground transport, agriculture and solar energy production.' The report highlights several hotspots where dust concentrations were particularly high in 2024. In the southern hemisphere, the West Coast of South Africa and central Australia saw their highest dust concentrations, ranging from 150 to 300 micrograms per cubic metre. This directly brings the global issue of airborne dust home to South Africa. This is because vast and remote deserts in Namibia and the Northern Cape are a major natural source of dust, and strong winds pick up this dust and blow it over the West Coast. This leads to extremely high concentrations of dust in the air for areas in the Western and Northern Cape, which, the WMO has confirmed, have levels among the highest recorded. As Leonie Joubert previously reported in Daily Maverick, the Northern Cape may be headed for an irreversible dust bowl following yearslong drought and decades of intensive mining and grazing. Dust storms are rare in South Africa, but they do occur over certain parts of the country. Then, in the northern hemisphere, the bulletin noted that the central African nation of Chad, home to the Bodélé Depression (a major dust source), experienced peak annual mean surface dust concentrations of about 800 to 1,100 micrograms per cubic metre of air. Major dust storm events in 2024 were observed across various regions in the bulletin: Canary Islands (December 2024): A strong 'Harmattan' wind surge from northwestern Africa carried dust from the Western Sahara Desert to Spain's Canary Islands, significantly impacting areas where most people live; East Asia (June 2024): Northern China, including Beijing, experienced rare summer dust storms. This was linked to poor vegetation growth in Mongolia due to high temperatures and drought, showing how extreme weather in a changing climate can drive such events; and West Asia (December 2024): Iraq, Kuwait, Qatar and the Arabian Peninsula were hit by an exceptional winter dust storm, causing widespread disruptions, including flight cancellations, school closures and postponed public events. The increase in dust in some regions is linked to a mix of natural and human-caused factors. These include more intense droughts, stronger winds and changes in how land is used. Things such as overgrazing, cutting down too many trees, poor land management, rapid growth of cities, new buildings and the drying up of important natural areas like marshes all make the soil less stable and more likely to turn into dust. The health implications of sand and dust storms are a major focus of the WMO report. A new indicator, developed jointly by the WMO and the World Health Organization (WHO), revealed a worrying trend: between 2018 and 2022, about 3.8 billion people – nearly half of the world's population – were exposed to dust levels exceeding the WHO's safety threshold. Local challenges and national efforts The WMO report's mention of the West Coast of South Africa as a region with high dust concentrations in the southern hemisphere shows that dust and sand storms are a local reality. South Africa is no stranger to dust storms; they are rare, but they do occur, and they can wreak havoc on agricultural land, damage property, worsen air quality, disrupt road and air travel and cause significant health problems, even leading to loss of life. A large dust storm swept across parts of the country in October 2014, which mainly affected Free State areas and De Aar in the Northern Cape, and another major dust storm affected parts of the country in January 2016. In 2019, people 'watched skies turn red' in Alexander Bay in the Northern Cape on 25 September as fierce winds carried huge plumes of sand and dust westward towards the Atlantic Ocean. This was visible from satellite imagery, according to the Nasa Earth Observatory, while photographs from people in Alexander Bay showed dark, hazy skies and streets that were barely visible. In fact, in a letter dated 10 October 2017, Transnet Port Terminals (TPT) addressed property owners in Vredenburg, Saldanha and Langebaan regarding a project to clean and paint properties affected by iron ore dust. The project's progress has been slow, partly due to Level 3 water restrictions preventing the use of drinking water for high-pressure cleaning. This points to damage to property from iron or dust, and how drought affected addressing the situation locally. Now, the report found that these storms are linked to both natural factors like precipitation and wind, and human factors. But there's also growing concern that the changing climate could be increasing the frequency, intensity and spread of these major dust events. The impact on public health From a public health perspective, understanding the implications of dust storms and sharing preventative measures is crucial. The South African Medical Research Council, in partnership with the Department of Health and the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment, has developed basic health protection steps for the public to take during dust storms. A study titled 'Exploring Meteorological Conditions and Human Health Impacts during Two Dust Storm Events in Northern Cape Province, South Africa: Findings and Lessons Learnt' (Nkosi et al., 2022) delved into the health effects of two specific dust storms in South Africa. This research, conducted at a large public hospital in Kimberley, on the border of the Northern Cape and Free State, examined hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, eye irritation and motor vehicle accidents during and after dust storm events in October 2014 and January 2016. While initial statistical analyses didn't show significant changes in admissions directly at the time of the dust storms, a more advanced technique called wavelet transform analysis revealed some delayed effects. They identified a cluster of hospital admissions for respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, eye irritation (and motor vehicle accidents) that were recorded between three and 40 days after the two dust storm events. Specifically, they found a small but statistically significant increase in hospital admissions for eye irritation up to 30 days after a dust storm. This aligns with international findings, since eye irritation is one of the most common health outcomes associated with dust storms. The study also suggested that the admissions might be linked to a combination of temperature and aerosol variations at the start of the dust storms. The researchers acknowledged that other factors, such as high background levels of dust from natural sources and human activities like biomass burning, could also contribute to hospital admissions, making it challenging to isolate the exact impact of dust storms alone. The health consequences of dust exposure can range from immediate effects like skin and eye irritation, decreased lung function and increased cardiovascular issues, to more long-term concerns such as adverse pregnancy outcomes. This research also stated that children, newborns, the elderly, pregnant women and individuals with chronic heart and lung conditions were particularly vulnerable. Unfortunately, South Africa currently has limited long-term national data on dust storm patterns and their precise health impacts, so the researchers noted that there was a need for more research to inform evidence-based policies. Towards a dust-resilient future Recognising the increasing threat of dust storms, the United Nations General Assembly officially declared 2025-2034 as the United Nations Decade on Combating Sand and Dust Storms on 10 July 2024. This global initiative aims to coordinate efforts to prevent, halt and lessen the negative impacts of these storms through shared early warning systems, scientific guidance and sustainable land management. South Africa is also taking steps to address this challenge. The Draft National Dust Control Amendment Regulations, 2025, published by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment in May, aim to improve dust control measures within the country. These regulations, which repeal and update the 2013 version, focus on: Identifying specific activities that generate dust; Updating the standard methods for collecting and measuring dustfall; and Improving the requirements for developing, implementing and reporting on dust management plans. Under these new regulations, certain individuals or entities, such as those involved in mining, reclamation or activities that generate dust and cause a nuisance, will be required to develop and submit dust management plans for approval. Failure to comply can result in significant penalties, including fines of up to R5-million (about $270,000) or imprisonment for up to five years for a first offence, with even higher penalties for repeat offences. WMO told Daily Maverick that the message from this latest report is to encourage governments to strengthen the capacity of national meteorological services to improve forecasts and early warnings. They noted that the South African Weather Service already has a very good track record in this respect. DM


Daily Maverick
19-06-2025
- Daily Maverick
Deadly Mthatha flood underscores worsening factors increasing risks for SA
As South Africa reels from another deadly flood, this time in the Eastern Cape, we take a look at the bigger picture of the nation's vulnerability. Floods are the country's most common weather disaster, with intense cut-off low weather systems, probably amplified by climate change, repeatedly causing devastation. After the devastating and deadly flooding that hit Mthatha and other parts of the Eastern Cape last week, people are still searching for missing loved ones, particularly children, and trying to salvage their belongings and homes. Mussa AjiDa said that they were still searching for his child, Simbongile, who went missing after the school transport Simbongile was travelling in was swept up in the Mthatha flooding on Tuesday, 10 June 2025. AjiDa was forlorn and exhausted when he spoke to Daily Maverick. Simbongile had still not been found, more than a week after 13 learners were swept away in the devastating scholar transport disaster. AjiDa said the search would continue until Simbongile had been found. This is just one among several cases playing out as South Africa responds to this most recent flooding incident, driven by heavy rainfall in a cut-off low weather system. Minister of Human Settlements Thembi Simelane confirmed on SAfm on Wednesday, 18 June that on top of the 90 lives lost – including learners from the tragic scholar transport incident – almost 1,600 structures and 5,000 people had been affected by the recent Eastern Cape floods. The immediate priority, she said, was to provide alternative accommodation to allow people to rebuild. But a significant challenge is the availability of suitable land, as many of the destroyed homes were built in unsafe areas too close to the Mthatha River, where rebuilding is not an option. President Cyril Ramaphosa promised last week that the government would assist those affected and provide shelter after entire homes were submerged and washed away. Year after year, parts of South Africa undergo significant flooding, wreaking havoc on housing, infrastructure, the environment and lives as the nation and communities attempt to build more resilient and responsive systems. Increasing trend of weather extremes Dr Stefaan Conradie, a climate science lecturer at the UCT Climate System Analysis Group, told Daily Maverick that recent flooding attribution studies suggest that rainfall from the cut-off low weather system along the east coast was probably becoming more intense due to climate change. In other words, climate change is likely exacerbating rainfall and causing devastating flooding in eastern South Africa. This was evidenced by the World Weather Attribution study on the 2022 KwaZulu-Natal floods. South African Weather Service (Saws) meteorologist and weather forecaster Lehlohonolo Thobela told Daily Maverick that there was an increasing trend of weather extremes over the central and eastern parts of the country, especially with many adverse weather conditions linked to heavy rainfall affecting KwaZulu-Natal and the Eastern Cape. In this case, an intense cut-off low weather system developed in the upper atmosphere on Sunday, 8 June, as forecast by Saws. Conradie said that as it moved across the eastern escarpment and south-east coast, a very intense surface low-pressure system developed roughly beneath it. This drove extremely strong winds that also transported a lot of moisture off the still relatively warm Agulhas Current region. 'Extremely heavy rainfall and destructive wind gusts resulted, particularly in the early hours of Tuesday, 10 Jun, over the eastern parts of the Eastern Cape,' said Conradie Multiple intersecting factors result in these kinds of disasters; weather and climate are only one aspect of that landscape. 'The adverse weather conditions in the Eastern Cape were because of the cut-off low that began by affecting the Western Cape and the Northern Cape from 7 June 2025. The weather system progressed to the eastern parts of the country and started to cause havoc over the Eastern Cape from 9-10 June 2025, Monday and Tuesday. The adverse weather conditions lasted for the week, with the emergency teams still helping. The weather system exited the area by Wednesday, 11 June 2025,' said Thobela. The areas over the central and eastern half of the Eastern Cape that were hit the hardest, recorded more than 50mm of rainfall water depth in 24 hours – Mthatha recorded 149mm, Port Alfred recorded 51.6mm and Makhanda (formerly Grahamstown) recorded 93.6 mm. But rainfall was not the only factor that escalated the disaster. Following an assessment by the Department of Water and Sanitation, engineers determined that the Mthatha flooding was exacerbated by two simultaneous events. On Monday, 9 June 2025, the Mthatha Dam was already at 99.8% capacity before sudden upstream rains raised its level to 102% by midnight, causing it to spill. At the same time, the Cicira River tributary, located downstream from the dam, was also experiencing flash floods. The department said that it was this combination of the dam's spillage and the heavy, independent flow from the flooded tributary that caused the Mthatha River to overflow its banks. Floods most common disasters in SA and Africa A recent study, published in May 2025, analysing weather-related disasters in South Africa from 1980 to 2023, found that floods and storms are the most common disasters in the country, with the highest number of incidents reported in KwaZulu-Natal. The research, which used the Emergency Events Database, also identified the primary weather systems driving these events. It was conducted by researchers from the University of Pretoria, the Global Change Institute at the University of Witwatersrand, the University of Limpopo, the South African Weather Service and others. Their analysis revealed that the eThekwini metropolitan municipality in KwaZulu-Natal recorded the most disasters during this period, while the Cape Town metropolitan area had the highest number in the western region of South Africa. In Gauteng, the most populous province in the country, Johannesburg saw the highest number of floods, and Ekurhuleni had the most storms. This aligns with what has been experienced across the continent – flooding has been the leading natural disaster in African countries for decades. The study found that floods were the most reported disaster type, with 49 occurrences, followed by storms with 33. Droughts and wildfires were the next most common, with 11 and 10 events, respectively. When it comes to the geographic distribution of these, the eastern part of South Africa, particularly KwaZulu-Natal, experienced the highest frequency of both floods and storms. The Cape Town metro was a hotspot for droughts. When it came to what has been driving the weather systems causing these, the study linked flood and storm disasters to eight types of synoptic weather systems. Cut-off lows were the most significant, causing 48 of the reported disasters. Upper troughs were the second most influential, responsible for 15 disasters. Ex-tropical cyclones were linked to four disasters during the 43-year period. Cut-off lows were also responsible for the Heritage Day floods in Cape Town in 2023 and the Nelson Mandela Bay floods of April and June 2024. The researchers found that the concentration of disasters in metropolitan areas such as eThekwini and Cape Town suggests that human factors such as urbanisation may amplify the impacts of extreme weather events. The research was based on data from the Emergency Events Database, which has specific criteria for including an event, such as 10 or more deaths, 100 or more people affected, a declaration of a state of emergency, or a call for international assistance. The authors noted that while their study provided a comprehensive overview, the reliance on the Emergency Events Database could lead to an underestimation of disaster events, particularly in rural areas where reporting may be less consistent. The study concluded that mid-latitude, mid-tropospheric systems were the primary drivers of flood and storm disasters in South Africa; it is hoped that these findings enhance the understanding of weather-related disaster risks in South Africa for better climate resilience and proactive disaster management. Thobela said the most important lesson they were learning was to make sure there was better communication with the affected communities and to make sure that there were more community engagements that taught about being proactive about weather warnings, rather than reactive. DM