City begins construction on R5.2bn Potsdam Wastewater Works upgrade

The upgrade is set to double the Potsdam Wastewater Works plant’s capacity to handle the needs of a growing city, from 47 million to 100 million litres of treated wastewater per day. Picture: City of Cape Town

The upgrade is set to double the Potsdam Wastewater Works plant’s capacity to handle the needs of a growing city, from 47 million to 100 million litres of treated wastewater per day. Picture: City of Cape Town

Published Aug 2, 2023

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Cape Town - The City of Cape Town’s goal to steadily restore the environmental health of the Milnerton Lagoon got under way as construction on the R5.2-billion Potsdam Wastewater Works upgrade began on Wednesday.

Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis visited the Potsdam Wastewater Treatment Works on Wednesday to mark the start of construction on the Western Cape’s second largest infrastructure project.

The City aims to finalise the upgrade in 2027, with the operational trial starting in 2026.

The City’s goal is to steadily restore the environmental health of the Milnerton Lagoon through a combination of infrastructure upgrades and dredging of the water body to remove pollution build-up in sediment.

The upgrade is set to double the plant’s capacity to handle the needs of a growing city, from 47 million to 100 million litres of treated wastewater per day.

Cutting-edge membrane technology will be progressively added to ensure high wastewater treatment standards.

The City of Cape Town’s goal to steadily restore the environmental health of the Milnerton Lagoon got under way as construction on the R5.2bn Potsdam Wastewater Works upgrade began on Wednesday. Picture: Supplied

Other major sewerage infrastructure upgrades under way in the vicinity include the R430-million Montague Gardens bulk sewer rehabilitation, R118m Koeberg pump station upgrade, and long-term pump station and pipe replacement programmes.

“The R5.2bn Potsdam upgrade is a critical part of our plan to restore the environmental health of Milnerton Lagoon, which is a non-negotiable for the City.

“The aim is to steadily close off pollution sources to the lagoon over time, building up to the ultimate goal of dredging the water body to remove the sediment containing the decades-long build-up of pollution,” said Hill-Lewis.

“The installation of cutting-edge wastewater treatment tech at Potsdam will be dovetailed with the completion of dredging at the lagoon, in around two years.

“This is a priority programme of this administration, and we are closely tracking the multibillion-rand upgrades to Potsdam and the surrounding sewer network to ensure these are completed timeously,” said Hill-Lewis.

Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis visited the Potsdam Wastewater Treatment Works on Wednesday to mark the start of construction on the Western Cape’s second largest infrastructure project. Picture: Supplied

Cape Town is massively ramping up infrastructure investment, with a 223% increase in its Water and Sanitation infrastructure budget over three years, from R2.3bn in 2022/23 to R7.8bn in 2025/26.

Highlights include:

  • R8.6bn capital expenditure on WWTW upgrades over three years
  • R1.3bn for sewer spill responsiveness including the proactive jet-cleaning of 200km of sewers annually
  • R1.4bn in bulk sewer upgrades to the Cape Flats, Milnerton, Philippi and Gordon’s Bay lines
  • quadrupling pipe replacement from 25km in 2021/22 to 100km annually, worth R850m total over three years.

Short-term actions to combat pollution

Mayco member for water and sanitation Zahid Badroodien said the City was taking a range of short-term actions to combat pollution in the Diep River catchment.

“We have just installed over 20 litter nets all along the Diep River, and expanded our waste interception to the Black and Salt Rivers as well as the Jakkalsvlei canal.

“We are also investigating and correcting cross connections created by residents from stormwater and sewer pipes, alongside ongoing by-law enforcement operations,” Badroodien said.

“We are also making progress on critical maintenance work to improve treated effluent quality at Potsdam, including major cleaning work to maturation ponds and the re-engineering of natural reed beds to prevent pollution from reaching the Diep River.

“Collaboration with local communities and civil society stakeholders, information sharing, and public involvement are essential aspects of our action plan,” said Badroodien.

Cape Argus