Off the wire
Chinese courts accept more administrative lawsuits  • Weather forecast for major Chinese cities, regions -- Nov. 2  • Chinese prosecutors target "money for commutation"  • Cross-strait entrepreneurs summit begins Tuesday  • Weather forecast for world cities -- Nov. 2  • Li calls on China, S. Korea to strengthen youth exchanges in innovation cooperation  • Xinhua Insight: Bumpy road for real-name parcel delivery  • Iraqi parliament says Abadi's reforms should comply with constitution  • Official denies total stock trading ban for CPC members  • Passenger remains from crashed Russian airliner to reach St. Petersburg  
You are here:   Home

S. Africa facing the worst drought since 1960s: official

Xinhua, November 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

South Africa has suffered in the past few months the worst drought since 1960s, Minister of Water Affairs and Sanitation Nomvula Mokonyane says.

The government on Monday announced the allocation of 350 million rand (about 26 million U.S. dollars) to fight the drought that has gripped parts of the country.

It comes after several provinces reported severe water shortage, with Free State and KwaZulu-Natal declared "disaster areas" to which water supplies are being delivered by water tankers.

Mokonyane said small dams in parts of the country have dried up.

The government would arrange the delivery of water to drought-hit areas, she said, urging "responsible use of water".

Meanwhile, Rand Water, the country's main water supplier, said it might be forced to introduce "water restrictions" in Gauteng province if there was no rainfall in a short time.

Water shortage has reportedly affected 2.7 million households in South Africa.

The drought has also dealt a blow to agricultural production.

Maize crop production is expected to fall from 14.25 million tonnes last year to an estimated 9.84 million tonnes this year, said John Purchase, chief executive officer at South Africa's Agricultural Business Chamber.

This means the country may have to import food to avert shortages, he said.

Significant drops in crop production are also expected in other Southern African countries, like Zimbabwe, Malawi, Madagascar and Lesotho, according to the World Food Programme.

Weather forecasters predict the record dry season would continue as the outlook for the coming rain season is not positive. Enditem