Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

São Paulo's Dry Reality: A Global City Running Out Of Water


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Greater São Paulo, home to 22 million people, is again close to a serious water crunch, with main reservoirs hovering around one-fifth of capacity.
  • To keep taps running, Sabesp is pumping“new” water from a protected mountain river 60 km away and buying control of key reservoirs long neglected by politics.
  • The crisis exposes how decades of postponed sanitation, river clean-up and real infrastructure planning are now being paid for in rationing, higher costs and conflict with coastal communities.

    Greater São Paulo looks like a modern world city, but when it comes to water security it behaves more like a town living one bad rainy season away from trouble.

    At the start of December, the Alto Tietê system was down at roughly 19% of its useful volume. Cantareira stood just above 20%. Overall, the integrated network feeding the metropolis was not much higher than a quarter full.

    To avoid the type of collapse seen in 2015, Sabesp has quietly moved into emergency mode. Night-time pressure reductions between 7 p.m. and 5 a.m. have already saved around 44 billion litres of water.

    At the same time, the company has rushed into operation a new scheme that lifts up to 2,500 litres per second from the Itapanhaú basin in the Serra do Mar, about 60 kilometres from the city.



    The project, costing in the region of R$ 300 million (about $56 million), uses 11 generators, a 500-metre tunnel through the mountain and nine kilometres of surface pipelines.
    São Paulo races to fix water woes with risky river shift
    Water is pushed almost 100 metres uphill before gravity carries it into the Alto Tietê reservoirs, increasing their supply by around 17% and easing pressure on Cantareira through the interlinked system.

    But the Itapanhaú cuts through protected Atlantic Forest and feeds mangroves and tourism in Bertioga on the coast. Local communities and environmental groups fear that diverting part of the flow will push saltwater further inland and damage fishing and small businesses.

    Their anger is not just about one river. It is about the feeling that the state is fixing yesterday's negligence with today's emergency works.

    For decades, money and political attention flowed more easily into big visible projects than into underground pipes, sewer networks and river clean-up.

    Billings, Guarapiranga, Tietê and Pinheiros became symbols of toxic water rather than assets to be recovered. Now Sabesp is paying roughly R$ 1.13 billion (about $209 million) to take control of EMAE and integrate energy and water management around Billings.

    If this shift is handled with technical discipline and long-term contracts rather than short-term slogans, São Paulo could finally turn its dirty rivers back into reliable supply.

    If not, the world's eyes may soon be watching a rich, industrial state struggling with a problem that should have been solved a generation ago: how to guarantee that the tap runs when you turn it on.

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  • The Rio Times

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