THE government is determined to solve water shortage in the city of Dar es Salaam permanently following different projects that were currently being implemented, Deputy Minister for Water and Irrigation Isaack Kamwelwe, has said.
Mr Kamwelwe told the National Assembly
here yesterday that the government would implement all promises made
regarding the matter. The promise of increasing water production from
Lower Ruvu plant has been implemented already.
According to the Deputy Minister, such
improvement also included laying of transmission line with 1800mm
dimension from the plant to the city, a distance of 56 kilometres. He
disclosed that the plant had started producing 270 million litres as
opposed to 180 million litres a day previously.
The deputy minister was responding to a
question by Saed Kubenea (Ubungo-Chadema), who had explained that the
government had made several promises to improve water supply in the
city, but after six years the problem was still there.
Mr Kubenea therefore wanted to know when
the government would keep the promise and why it gave wananchi promises
it could not keep. The MP further sought to know the reason behind the
failure to implement the plan to distribute water from Ruvu.
The plan was expected to relieve many
areas in the city including Ubungo of the problem. In response, the
deputy minister said the expansion project of Upper Ruvu plant was
completed and producing 196 million litres from 82 million litres per
day.
He said that laying of two pipes from
Mlandizi to Kimara, construction of new tank at Kibamba and renovation
of tanks at Kimara, had reached the 98 per cent stage, while operation
tests started this month.
The deputy minister further pointed out
that the government was also proceeding with implementation of Kimbiji
and Mpera projects and the contractor had completed the drilling of nine
wells among 20 planned.
Such work, he said, was expected to be
over in August this year. Upon completion the wells would produce 260
million litres daily. The contract for construction of pipes for water
distribution in the city was signed on December 11, 2015. Mr Kamwelwe
said that the contractor was on the site surveying, identifying water
pipe lines and areas where tanks would be constructed.
By his account, the construction was
expected to take off this May and would be completed in June 2017. He
further disclosed that production of water in Dar es Salaam city
currently stood at 390 million litres per day as compared to the actual
need of 450 million litres.
He said that upon completion of all the
projects production would reach 750 million litres. In a supplementary
question by the MP over urgent measures to solve the problem, Mr
Kamwelwe pointed out that the project worth 32.9 million US dollars was
being implemented.
The project, he said, was expected to be
completed in April 2017 and involved replacement of old water pipes and
laying of new pipes in areas yet to be covered. Other areas include
Bagamoyo town, Mpiji, Bunju and Mabwepande.
Others are Boko, Bweni, Tegeta, Ununio,
Wazo, Salasala, Kizundi, Matosa, Mbezi Juu, Goba, Changanyikeni,
Makongo, Kiluvya, Kibamba, Mbezi,Msakuzi, Makabe, Maramba Mawili and
Msigali.
The Deputy Minister also said that there
was another initiative involving a project of digging 51 wells in areas
of Kilungule A and B, Makurunza A, King’ongo I and 3, Sandari, Mpogo,
Mwembe Radu, Mburahati and Kipunguni. Other areas included FFU Ukonga,
Uwanja wa Ndege, Segerea, Chanika and Yombo, Saranga, Chang’ombe A,
Ununio, Keko and Chang’ombe Toroli.
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