Drinking water outage hits half of Mayotte

A woman collects bottles of Cristaline drinking water from a distribution point in Mamoudzou, on the French Indian Ocean island of Mayotte, on 19 February, 2024. (File photo)

Around half the people in the French overseas department of Mayotte were without potable water Tuesday after a "technical incident" at a treatment plant, a local authority said in a statement.

The "event of electrical origin" at the Ouroveni plant overnight from Monday to Tuesday "is leading to water cuts mostly located in the centre and south" of Mayotte's main island Grande Terre, the prefecture said.

Around half of Mayotte's population of 320,000 depends on Ouroveni's daily output of up to 20,000 cubic metres of drinking water.

Water shortages

The island territory has for years been battling water shortages.

Low rainfall and numerous leaks in the distribution system prompted authorities to cut water supplies for as much as two out of every three days between August 2023 and January this year.

Cuts are still in force for one in every three days as "daily consumption is estimated at 45,000 cubic metres, but the territory can only produce a maximum of 40,000," said Jerome Josserand, head of the territory's DEALM environment, planning, housing and maritime authority.

Potable water tanks

Several schools - usually continuously supplied with water - were forced to send pupils home on Tuesday, with the education authority counting three middle schools and two high schools.

(with AFP)


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