Johannesburg - Millions of litres of highly acidic mine water is rising up under Johannesburg and, if left unchecked, could spill out into its streets some 18 months from now, Parliament's water affairs portfolio committee heard on Wednesday.

The acid water is currently about 600m below the city's surface, but is rising at a rate of between 0.6 and 0.9m a day, water affairs deputy director water quality management Marius Keet told MPs.

"(It) can have catastrophic consequences for the Johannesburg central business district if not stopped in time. A new pumping station and upgrades to the high-density sludge treatment works are urgently required to stop disaster," he warned.

Speaking at the briefing, activist Mariette Liefferink, from the Federation for a Sustainable Environment, said the rising mine water posed an "enormous threat", which would become worse if remedial actions were further delayed.

"This environmental problem is second (in SA) only to global warming in terms of its impact, and poses a serious risk to the Witwatersrand as a whole. At the rate it is rising, the basin (under Johannesburg) will be fully flooded in about 18 months."

Mine drainage


She said the rising mine water had the same acidity as vinegar or lemon juice, and was a legacy of 120 years of gold mining in the region.

Acid water is formed underground when old shafts and tunnels fill up. The water oxidises with the sulphide mineral iron pyrite, better known as fool's gold. The water then fills the mine and starts decanting into the environment, in a process known as acid mine drainage.

Keet said the problem was not just confined to Johannesburg, which is located atop one of several major mining "basins" in the Witwatersrand, known as the Central Basin.

In 2002, acid mine drainage had started decanting from the Western Basin, located below the Krugersdorp-Randfontein area. The outflow had grown worse earlier this year after heavy rains, prompting his department to intervene.

However, a lack of treatment capacity in the area "compelled in-stream treatment as a short-term intervention".

This intervention saw the department pouring tons of lime, an alkali, into the Tweelopies Spruit in an effort to neutralise the acid mine water. This had led to problems with the resulting sludge that had formed in the water course.

The region's Eastern Basin, below the town of Nigel, was also threatened. The last working mine still pumping out water in the area was Grootvlei. Keet said that if the mine stopped pumping, acid water would start decanting into the town "within two to three years".

Legal action

Water Affairs is currently taking legal action against the mine, after it allegedly failed to comply with a departmental directive to treat the pumped water before discharging it.

On stopping the growing threat below Johannesburg, Keet said about R220m was needed to establish pump stations, pipelines and treatment works. Responding to a question, he said there were plans to tackle the problem.

"The idea is to build a pump station; the challenge is where the money will come from," he said.

Liefferink said if the acid mine water rose to the surface in Johannesburg's CBD, it posed a threat to the city's inhabitants, its buildings and the surrounding environment.

She told MPs that residents of many of Gauteng's poorer communities were living alongside, and in some cases on top of, land contaminated by mining activities. They were exposed to high concentrations of cobalt, zinc, arsenic, and cadmium, all known carcinogens, as well as high levels of radioactive uranium.

"In some cases, RDP houses are being erected next to radioactive dumps," she told MPs, who expressed shock and concern at the news.

Liefferink said acid mine drainage was exacerbating the problem, because it dissolved the heavy metals and precipitated them in water sources and wetlands, where people grew crops and abstracted water.

Threat


She also warned that some of the heavily polluted streams drained into the Vaal River system, and posed a threat to the region's water supply.

Liefferink, who backed up her presentation with a series of photographs showing, among other things, shacks erected on top of an old mine tailings dump, received a round of applause from MPs.

Mining started on the Witwatersrand about 120 years ago. More than 43 000 tons of gold and 73 000 tons of uranium have been extracted from the region's mines.

According to Liefferink, this mining activity has left a legacy of about 400km² of mine tailings dams and about six billion tons of pyrite tailings containing low-grade uranium.

"Waste from gold mines constitutes the largest single source of waste and pollution in South Africa... Acid mine drainage may continue for many years after mines are closed and tailings dams decommissioned," she said.


- SAPA

 
 
Turns out that there's a lot going on upstairs. Green roof tech is heating up -- or rather, getting cooler, and the masterminds behind two promising sustainable rooftop inventions are actually still in high school.

Even though 1980s clothes are considered vintage and I had to explain to the girl who bought my old manual camera that it required this stuff called "film," the annual Lemelson-MIT EurekaFest reminds me that the kids are alright. More than alright -- they're going to save us. I'm a little late to be talking about the mid-June gathering of high school teams that come up with problem-solving inventions because of my cross-country move, but making a better roof is timeless.

Want plants on your house but have a funky-shaped roof? No problem. The team from Hillside New Tech High School in Durham, North Carolina, came up with a structure that makes it possible to grow plants on sloped rooftops. Their lattice-system contains modified roof air vents and vine boxes lined with polyurethane foam that anchors the plants, replacing soil. Clamps attached to the roof's sideboard hold the lattice in place. The system costs $10 to $20 per square yard.

"The object of the invention is to have the vines grow through the lattice to cover the roof and provide natural shade," explains Sidhartha Jandhyala, a student member of the Hillside team. "Also, we are targeting storm water runoff and the urban heat island effect." A hydroponic system with a solar-powered water pump sends rainwater from a collection barrel to the plants through drip irrigation.

When it rains, the water is captured by the rain barrels instead of running off and leaking pollution into nearby streams and lakes, says Victor Abiona, another student on the team. Hillside currently has a prototype of the roof on the school campus that the team is testing. Ultimately they'd like to patent it and get the structure onto local rooftops in Durham. 

Washington County Technical High School from Hagerstown, Maryland, invented a color-changing roof that lightens in hot weather and darkens when it gets cold. Their system reminds me a little bit of the temperature-sensitive Thermeleon roof tiles that a group of MIT grads created last year from polymer sandwiched between flexible plastic, except it has a different mechanism. Their system has a gear-driven system of black and white tubes that run perpendicular to the roof's drip edge and rotate at pre-determined temperatures. The whole thing can switch from dark to light. During the winter, warm air collected in the tubes could potentially be pumped back inside the house.

"The system can run on very low voltage," says Alan Zube, a pre-engineering teacher at the high school who mentored the team. "The needed energy could easily be generated with a 20W photovoltaic cell mounted on the roof." Initially the team used PVC for the tubes but found after testing that aluminum would work better. Eventually the team would like to realize a full-sized prototype of their invention.

Solid rooftops can last lifetimes so I'm relieved that these high school kids are focused on this crucial part of green building now. Perhaps by the time the students reach middle age, most rooftops will be able to take care of themselves.

 
 
Overseas visitors to Johannesburg can drink the city's water without fear because it is clean and safe, Johannesburg Water said on Thursday.

"We can say that residents and visitors to the city of Johannesburg needn't fear about the quality of water supply to city," the utility's laboratory support manager, Russel Rimmer, said.

Speaking at a briefing on the R3,1-billion programme of improvements and replacements within the city's 10 000km water-mains network, he said Johannesburg Water conducts more than the legally required number of sample tests on supplies it receives from Rand Water, and is confident that the city's supplies are safe.

"We do over 40 tests on the samples to be 100% sure of the water quality," he said.

Complaints to the company are generally about the colour of the water, which could indicate that chlorine levels need to be adjusted, or cloudiness, which usually means there has been work on a nearby pipeline.

Claims of illness due to the water are investigated and, said Rimmer, Johannesburg Water had found that such reports of illness had not been related to the water quality. If this was the case, an entire area would have been affected, not just the individual who asked the company to investigate.

Award
Managing director Gerald Dumas said that it is common in Europe to see signs indicating when it is not safe to drink the tap water, but this is not an issue within Johannesburg Water's networks, which covers areas from Orange Farm to Midrand, and Roodepoort to Alexandra, and supplies about 3,8-million people.

"Sometimes we are even scared to brush our teeth and we go out [in Europe] and buy a bottle of water. So, our water is safe."

Johannesburg Water had recently won the "Blue Drop" award from the Department of Water Affairs, which said the city had the cleanest water nationally and ranked among the world's best.

 CONTINUES BELOW 

To sustain this it has been doing repairs, replacements and maintenance over the past years, and while this might frustrate consumers, he said: "You need to bear with us. We are here to assist you and provide services."

Many of the disruptions currently experienced are due to workers connecting new pipelines -- which have been laid parallel to the old -- to the network.

These connections will not be done during the Soccer World Cup to avoid disruptions to water supply, and will resume towards the end of July, explained Ntshavheni Mukwevho, general manager of capital investment and infrastructure development.

It was also replacing old asbestos cement pipelines that had been prone to leaks, which accounted for at least 10% of water losses. -- Sapa
 
 
Experts fear looming pollution crisis could hamstring economic growth, writes Anton FerreiraMay 23, 2010 12:07 AM | By Anton Ferreira 
South Africa faces a water crisis that could cripple economic growth and cause a plague of health problems - but critics say the government has yet to act with urgency.

The most immediate concern is the acid mine drainage (AMD) polluting a vast swathe from the Witwaters-rand to Mpumalanga. Other threats include pesticide run-off, broken infrastructure and failed sewage plants.
As the population grows and economic recovery puts more pressure on limited inland water resources, experts predict a shift of industrial activity to coastal areas where desalination plants will have to meet a growing share of demand.

Environmentalists warn that if the government and industry fail to act, within two years mine water as corrosive as battery acid will gush from Johannesburg's Wemmer Pan and seep into the city's streets and gardens.

"It is acutely toxic," said Mariette Liefferink, who leads a group of non-governmental organisations lobbying for action. "It affects the soil and neural development of the foetus, which leads to mental retardation; it will cause cancer, cognitive problems, skin lesions," she said.

"These are all the foreseeable risks if we do not manage our AMD."

Acid mine drainage, which occurs when mines close and stop pumping water out of shafts, has contaminated streams and dams on the West and East Rand that feed into the Limpopo and Vaal rivers. Treatment by utilities such as Rand Water renders the water safe, but those who drink straight from rivers are at risk.

Liefferink accused the government of dragging its feet. "Unfortunately they're taking a very short-term, Band-Aid approach. Radical measures should be taken."

Mine water can be made safe to drink by reverse osmosis, as an Anglo American coal mine is doing in Witbank, but this is expensive.

Jo Burgess, a research manager at the Water Research Commission, said government departments were taking steps to deal with this "very serious problem".

"Whether the steps are sufficient or not we will only know as time passes, because it takes years, if not decades, for the impacts of acid drainage and the efforts to mitigate it to become noticeable."

A Department of Water Affairs spokesman, Linda Page, said the department was formulating a strategy. With the National Nuclear Regulator it was investigating the clean-up of sediment in the Wonderfonteinspruit on the West Rand, heavily contaminated with uranium.

"Our planning within the department for the country's future water needs is strong," Page said. "However, SA will have to adjust more and more to the fact that our fresh water resources are limited and we have to use our water more efficiently."

A Centre for Development and Enterprise report says water-supply problems could rival the electricity shortage as a hurdle to development.

Many aspects of the looming crisis were a result of "over-ambitious" plans in the immediate post-apartheid period to provide running water to impoverished rural areas. "They remain laudable in principle, but the harsh truth is that they have proved impossible to implement effectively."

Bill Harding, an expert on dam ecology, said one of the biggest threats to water supplies was sewage flowing into dams, bringing nutrients that spur the growth of toxic algae.

Other harmful substances, such as disease-causing bacteria and hormones that can disrupt development of sexual organs in foetuses, were probably also present.

"We've been warning about reservoir management since the mid-'80s," Harding said.

"All the dams in Gauteng are in a critical condition. We're getting rapidly to the point where we're going to have a massive crisis. There'll be water coming through your tap, but you won't be able to drink it."

According to figures cited by the SA Institute of Civil Engineering, SA will need R500-billion over the next 10 years to fix water infrastructure and install fresh capacity.

Jabu Maphalala, spokesman for the Chamber of Mines, said the industry agreed in 1994 to put aside funds for rehabilitation.

"However, mining has taken place for over 100 years, and left undesirable legacies, some of which emanate from abandoned, ownerless as well as derelict mines," he said.

"Legislation now stresses the 'polluter pays' principle, but it is not easy to apply in dealing with this legacy because the original operators have long disappeared and the commodities produced have been consumed."

 
 
April 24, 2010

The project will be used to recharge local aquifers and provide clean drinking water.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/bigberto/


Pakistan’s first urban rainwater harvesting system has been installed in the capital city Islamabad, theDaily Times reports.

The collection tanks at the Faisal Mosque complex were funded by the city’s Capital Development Authority, and will provide clean drinking water while recharging the local water table for the city’s nearly 1 million residents.

Known as the Pilot Rainwater Harvesting Project, the initiative was developed in collaboration with the United Nations Development Program and the Pakistan Council of Research for Water Resources.

The CDA hopes to increase the number of rainwater harvesting systems in the capital. Meanwhile Islamabad’s building code has been amended to include design specifications for buildings with a footprint that is greater than 400 square yards, according to a press release from CDA chairman Imtiaz Inayat Elahi.

Rainwater harvesting projects are already in use in the eastern Thar and Cholistan deserts along the Indian border. Few rivers flow year-round in these areas, requiring residents to store water from the rainy season for use during the dry months.

One project in the Sindh Province coordinated by the Thardeep Rural Development Program, a local NGO, uses several methods to collect rainwater.

“At the moment, we have three types of projects, which include rain water harvesting at household levels, also known as cisterns or tankas,” Jhuman Lalchandani, the project manager, told IRIN.

“At hamlet level, ponds are used for saving water for the community, and at the village level we have delay action dams. Also, in low-lying areas, flood protection walls not only save houses from getting flooded but also allow for water to pool up and be used for other purposes,” Lalchandani said.

Across the border, rainwater harvesting in India is increasingly popular. In 18 of the country’s 28 states it is mandatory to include collection systems in new buildings. Cities such as Mumbai and Bangalore are using the small-scale technology to endure water shortages.




Source: Daily TimesIRIN