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Leakage reduction through pressure management in Khayelitsha: Two years down the line


RS McKenzie
H Mostert
T de Jager

Abstract



The Khayelitsha Pressure Management Project has been well documented and widely publicised since it was commissioned
towards the end of 2001. The project has received numerous national and international awards for technical excellence as well as
for environmental awareness and community involvement. The initial water saved by the project was estimated to be in the order
of 9 million m3/yr representing approximately 40% of the original 22 million m3/yr supplied to the area.
In many examples of WDM interventions, the initial savings achieved by the project are not always sustainable and the true
savings several years later are often significantly lower than those originally achieved. It is for this reason that the project team
and the Client responsible for the Khayelitsha pressure management project decided to produce a final paper documenting the
results and actual savings two years after the completion of the installation.
The paper presents details of the initial savings suggested by the project team and compares them to the latest savings estimated
by the Client. Problems associated with the installation experienced by the Client and consumers are discussed as well as any
lessons learned by both the design team and the Client's team. It is through such feedback that future pressure management
installations can be designed and commissioned with confidence in areas as large or even larger than Khayelitsha.

Water SA Vol. 30 (5) 2002: pp.13-17

Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1816-7950
print ISSN: 0378-4738