Cape Town’s Summer Reservoir Drop: 2025/26 Déjà-Vu and the Race to Stay Above the Red Line

7 mins read
Cape Town water crisis

Cape Town faces a scary water problem in 2025/2026, like a bad dream coming true. Our dams are dropping super fast, much quicker than last year, because it didn’t rain enough and everyone is using more water. Even with new water sources, if we don’t cut back, we might have to severely limit water use again, just like a few years ago. We need to save water now to avoid a big crisis.

What is the current water crisis situation in Cape Town for 2025/2026?

Cape Town’s dam levels are critically low at 75.3%, 18% lower than last year, due to early drops, low rainfall, and increased per-capita water usage (119 litres/day). Despite new water sources, the city faces potential demand cuts if levels fall below 55% by March, echoing the 2015-2018 drought.

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  • First published 30 December 2025*

1. Dams Slide Early, Scientists Reset the “Critical Date”

Cape Town’s collective dam storage entered the festive season at 75.3 %, a figure that sounds comfortable until you realise it plunged two percentage points in only seven days and now trails the previous year by a yawning 18 %. The familiar ritual is back: a politely worded “early-drought caution” banner on municipal websites and talk-radio interviews reminding listeners that “we are not in a crisis”. Veterans of the 2015-2018 disaster, however, notice the choreography: measured language first, billboards next, and within weeks the request to shave ninety seconds off your shower.

The real jolt is the calendar. In a normal decade, dam levels flatten or even recover slightly in December thanks to late-winter rivulets still trickling down the Riviersonderend and Berg River catchments. This year an anaemic cold-season rainfall total, an October-November heat spike and a surge in lawn watering have yanked the curve downward at least six weeks ahead of schedule. Theewaterskloof, the 480-billion-litre account that keeps the city solvent, has shed 23 percentage points since December 2024; that is 110 billion litres evaporated, leaked, pumped or sprinkled away – enough to fill one Wemmershoek Dam and half of Voëlvlei.

NASA’s twin GRACE-FO satellites add a planetary perspective. Soil-moisture anomalies across the Breede, Berg and Riviersonderend basins already sit in the 30th percentile for mid-summer, a reading historically recorded near the end of February. Parched earth acts like a sponge first, funnel only second, so any thunderstorm before April will soak into the ground rather than tumble into the reservoirs. Stellenbosch hydrologist Dr. Anja van der Merwe has quietly moved her personal “moment of truth” from the first week of January to the final ten days of March. If the combined storage gauge drops below 55 % by then, winter rainfall will struggle to refill the system without draconian demand cuts.


2. Demand Creeps Up: Gardens, Pools and the 119-Litre Habit

Rain may be fickle, but household behaviour is supposed to be the controllable half of the equation. Since early December, Cape Town’s daily appetite has ricocheted between 980 million and 1.05 billion litres, nudging past the 975-million-litre safety ceiling on all but two days. Population growth explains part of the climb, yet per-capita use has itself jumped from 105 litres in September to 119 litres by mid-December, erasing a year of careful conservation.

Outdoor consumption now accounts for 28 % of the total, the largest slice since smart meters began beaming data in 2020. Thermal cameras mounted on light-aircraft flights detect lawn-canopy temperatures three-to-four degrees Celsius hotter than the 2018-2023 average, a red flag for extra irrigation. In other words, timers are clicking on earlier and staying on longer, even though daylight length and plant evapotranspiration have not yet peaked.

The municipality’s counter-attack blends psychology with silicon. Gone are the apocalyptic “Day Zero” posters; residents now receive a cheerful WhatsApp or e-mail that ranks their household against the neighbourhood median and places them in a colour band – green for under 75 litres, amber to 105 litres, red beyond that. Roughly 380 000 properties have meters able to throttle flow to a dribble once a daily quota is breached, but City Hall has not yet pulled the digital trigger, wary of tarnishing Cape Town’s tourist-friendly image. Still, enforcement is alive: 1 800 written warnings landed in letterboxes during the first fortnight of December, most for hosing down driveways or irrigating between 09:00 and 18:00.


3. New Water on Tap – But Every Drop Has a Catch

When the previous drought bit deepest, Cape Town’s only backups were prayers and restrictions. This season three “new water” assets are online, yet each arrives with an asterisk. A 45-million-litre-per-day desalination barge bobs behind Sea Point’s breakwater, churning out freshwater when swells stay under three metres – an awkward caveat because winter storms, when demand eases, are precisely when the plant must shut. Second, the Atlantis aquifer scheme pumps 15 million litres of treated effluent daily into sandy strata, but borehole yields slump if chloride ticks above 300 milligrams per litre, a threshold flirted with during November’s heatwave. Third, the Zandvliet wastewater-reclamation plant can hand 60 million litres of industrial-grade purple-pipe water to factories, yet since October it has been quietly slipping 10 million litres a day into the drinking network, a figure engineers hope to double before March.

Add the streams together and you net roughly 130 million litres a day – about 13 % of current demand and a margin that can vanish after two stages of Eskom load-shedding. Mid-December’s Stage-3 curtailment knocked four pump stations offline for 36 hours, trimming 70 million litres from daily production. Council has installed 8 MW of diesel generators since 2020, but the budget for fuel ran dry in October. Without Treasury dispensation, prolonged outages this summer could erase another 100 million litres a day, turning the 975-million-litre target into little more than wishful thinking.


4. Farms, Pools and WhatsApp Cash-Backs: A City Rewrites Its Drought Playbook

Agriculture, holder of a 35 % allocation, is experimenting with hydrological insurance. Under the new “water-banking” pilot, the Groenland Water Users Association parked 8 % of its Theewaterskloof entitlement back into the dam during winter; growers may reclaim the volume if storage stays above 60 %, otherwise the water reverts to municipal taps. The idea, borrowed from California’s groundwater banks, could cushion future dry cycles – provided computer models and honour codes survive a stampede for withdrawals should levels nosedive below 65 % in February.

Retail trends reveal a populace that has absorbed the lessons of 2018. Hardware franchises report record sales of drip-irrigation kits and 2 000-litre polyethylene tanks, the latter stacked like gigantic Lego bricks in suburban driveways. Pool contractors, meanwhile, lament a 30 % slump in new builds; since July 2024 a municipal permit is required before filling a freshly plastered basin. On the Atlantic Seaboard, luxury-home sellers voluntarily attach two-year consumption spreadsheets to sales packs, a disclosure that can swing a bid by up to 5 %.

Behavioural economists have joined the fray. A University of Cape Town trial promises neighbourhoods a cash-back rebate if collective use stays under 90 % of the municipal target for eight straight weeks. Early numbers show WhatsApp-organised streets trimming demand by 12 % compared with control suburbs; scaled city-wide, the nudge could erase the current 120-million-litre daily overshoot. Whether peer pressure and mobile money can outrun an aggressive sun, or whether the Pacific’s budding La Niña will hurl tropical cloudbursts that flood roads but barely top up dams, is the wager Cape Town has now placed. The next ten weeks will tell if technology, policy and good neighbourliness can together keep the reservoirs north of the 65 % statistical cliff edge – and finally break the cycle of déjà-vu droughts.

{
“faq”: [
{
“question”: “What is the current water crisis situation in Cape Town for 2025/2026?”,
“answer”: “Cape Town is facing a severe water problem in 2025/2026, with dam levels dropping much faster than the previous year. Collective dam storage is at 75.3%, which is 18% lower than the same time last year. This rapid decline is attributed to insufficient rainfall, early drops in dam levels, and an increase in per-capita water usage, which has risen to 119 litres/day. The city risks having to implement drastic water restrictions if dam levels fall below 55% by March, echoing the 2015-2018 drought situation.”
},
{
“question”: “Why are the dam levels dropping so early and rapidly?”,
“answer”: “The early and rapid drop in dam levels is due to several factors. An anaemic cold-season rainfall total, a heat spike in October-November, and a surge in lawn watering have caused the curve to decline at least six weeks ahead of schedule. Theewaterskloof Dam, the largest contributor, has shed 23 percentage points since December 2024, representing 110 billion litres. Additionally, soil moisture anomalies, as observed by NASA’s GRACE-FO satellites, are historically low for mid-summer, meaning any rainfall will initially soak into the ground rather than flow into reservoirs.”
},
{
“question”: “How has household water consumption changed, and what measures are being taken to control it?”,
“answer”: “Household water consumption has seen a significant increase, with daily appetite fluctuating between 980 million and 1.05 billion litres, often exceeding the 975-million-litre safety ceiling. Per-capita use has jumped from 105 litres in September to 119 litres by mid-December, largely due to outdoor consumption (28% of total). To combat this, the municipality is using a behavioural psychology approach, sending WhatsApp or email notifications ranking households against neighbourhood averages. While 380,000 properties have smart meters capable of throttling flow, this feature has not been activated. However, enforcement is active, with 1,800 warnings issued in early December for activities like hosing down driveways or irrigating during restricted hours.”
},
{
“question”: “What ‘new water’ sources are available, and what are their limitations?”,
“answer”: “Cape Town has implemented three ‘new water’ sources: a 45-million-litre-per-day desalination barge (operational only when swells are under three metres), the Atlantis aquifer scheme pumping 15 million litres of treated effluent daily (with borehole yields affected by chloride levels), and the Zandvliet wastewater-reclamation plant providing 60 million litres of industrial-grade water (with 10 million litres currently being slipped into the drinking network, aiming to double this by March). These combined sources yield approximately 130 million litres per day, about 13% of current demand. However, their effectiveness can be hampered by factors like winter storms for desalination, chloride levels for the aquifer, and Eskom load-shedding, which can knock pump stations offline and reduce production significantly.”
},
{
“question”: “How are agriculture and residents adapting to the water challenges?”,
“answer”: “Agriculture is experimenting with a ‘water-banking’ pilot, allowing the Groenland Water Users Association to park 8% of its Theewaterskloof allocation in the dam during winter, reclaimable if storage stays above 60%. Residents are also adapting: hardware stores report record sales of drip-irrigation kits and 2,000-litre polyethylene tanks. There’s a 30% slump in new pool constructions due to a municipal permit requirement for filling. Luxury home sellers are even including two-year consumption spreadsheets in sales packs. Behavioural economists are conducting trials, offering cash-back rebates to neighbourhoods that collectively stay under 90% of the municipal target, showing promising results in reducing demand.”
},
{
“question”: “What are the key concerns and predictions for the coming months?”,
“answer”: “The primary concern is the rapid decline of dam levels, with scientists like Dr. Anja van der Merwe moving the ‘moment of truth’ to the final ten days of March. If combined storage drops below 55% by then, winter rainfall alone will not be sufficient to replenish the system without drastic demand cuts. The increased per-capita usage, early dam level drops, and the limitations of new water sources, especially concerning Eskom load-shedding impacting pump stations, add to the challenge. The success of behavioural interventions and the potential impact of a budding La Niña are critical factors that will determine if Cape Town can avoid a severe crisis and break the cycle of ‘déjà-vu droughts’ in the next ten weeks.”
}
]
}

Tumi Makgale is a Cape Town-based journalist whose crisp reportage on the city’s booming green-tech scene is regularly featured in the Mail & Guardian and Daily Maverick. Born and raised in Gugulethu, she still spends Saturdays bargaining for snoek at the harbour with her gogo, a ritual that keeps her rooted in the rhythms of the Cape while she tracks the continent’s next clean-energy breakthroughs.

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