Dependence on the Zambezi River
The Zambezi River rises in the Congo, curves through the top of Zambia into Angola and then traverses Zambia from north to south until it hits a basalt barrier at Kazungula where the boundaries of Zimbabwe, Zambia, Botswana and Namibia meet. At that point it turns east and cuts across Zimbabwe and Zambia until it exits Zimbabwe at Kanyemba and enters the Cahora Bassa Dam and then down to the Indian Ocean.
It is not a long river by international standards or a very big river, but it is one of the cleanest and most important rivers in the world. It’s not navigable like the Rhine or the Congo, but it supports two of the larger hydro electric power stations in the world and serves six southern African States. In a region where fresh water is going to be very short the Zambezi is a system that everyone is looking at and wondering how do we get access to this resource?
The elephant in the room is South Africa – already a largely arid or semi arid country where a third of the GDP of Africa is generated in the Gauteng Province. By this year, Gauteng will have largely exhausted its traditional sources of water from the Vaal River, the Highlands Water Scheme in Lesotho and the rivers of Natal. Further growth in this Province is going to be dependent on sources outside the traditional supply zone and the Zambezi or the Okavango River systems offer one major possibility.
For many years, the South Africans have planned and pondered on a scheme to take water from the Zambezi River system – probably in northern Botswana and then run it through a system of pipelines and open canals past Francistown to Gauteng. An offtake to Bulawayo has even been considered. Those who think that such schemes are farfetched need to appreciate that Windhoek, the Capital of Namibia already moves water from the north and after moving it for 800 kilometers dumps it into underground aquifers for recovery when needed.
The Zambezi is famous for the spectacular gorges it is cutting back through a vast sheet of volcanic rock basalt and the cutting edge is the Victoria Falls. But in winter the Falls are often reduced to a few isolated falls along its front and in summer you often cannot see the Falls for heavy spray. This mighty river is now captured in two of the largest dams in the world, Kariba and Cahora Bassa.