
Cold front sees welcome rise in Western Cape dam levels
The latest official dam level stats for the Western Cape show that cumulatively the six major dams in the province are still below 60% of capacity, but that they have risen week-on-week for the first time this year.
The six major dams in the Western Cape – the Berg River, Steenbras Lower, Steenberg Upper, Theewaterskloof, Voelvlei and Wemmershoek – all saw increases as rain lashed the province in recent weeks.
And the forecast for another cold front to hit the Cape this week spells more good news for dam levels.
The City of Cape Town uploaded its latest stats on Wednesday, 28 May.
The latest figures show the six dams are a combined 59.2% of total storage.
That's up from the 59% the previous week.
The current levels are down on the same period a year ago when the combined percentage stood at 60%.
Theewaterskloof, which accounts for more than 50% of the Western Cape's total dam capacity (480 188 MI of a total of 898 221 MI) is at 59% of capacity, while the next biggest dam, Voëlvlei (164 095 MI), is at 58.2%.
Western Cape residents need no reminding of life during the 'Day Zero' water crisis from mid-2017 to mid-2018.
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