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The Zimbabwe National Water Authority is a state-owned company, which was formed in 2000 guided by the terms of the ZINWA Act (Chapter 20:25). ZINWA falls under the Ministry of Lands, Agriculture, Fisheries, Water and Rural Resettlement. [2]
NAC and MoWRDM also supervise the Zimbabwe National Water Authority (ZINWA), responsible for water distribution across sectors, including management of 250 major dams [5] NAC operates through subcommittees like Rural Water Supply and Sanitation, and Urban Water Supply and Sanitation, involving various governmental agencies in rural and urban ...
The act was operationalized on 17 March 2003 through Statutory Instrument 103 of 2003. The Government has chipped in working hand in glove with the Ministry of Environment, Tourism, and Hospitality Industry, and the EMA to create a healthy environment through the National Clean up Day as amended by the Constitution of Zimbabwe.
Sebakwe Dam is a dam in the Midlands Province of Zimbabwe. It was built in 1957 and owned by the Zimbabwe government. It is across Sebakwe River in the Sanyati Catchment Area. It has a full capacity of 266 megalitres which makes it one of the largest inland dams of Zimbabwe. It is 8 kilometres long and its maximum width is 2.5 kilometres; The ...
There has been tension between the countries that border the river. In the early 1990s, Zimbabwe proposed to build a pipeline to carry water south to supply the city of Bulawayo. Botswana also proposed to carry water south to Gaborone through an extension to the North-South Carrier (NSC). Some of the NSC water could be shared with South Africa.
The following is a partial list of dams in Zimbabwe. List of dams (reservoirs) Name ... Media related to Bodies of water in Zimbabwe at Wikimedia Commons Major dams ...
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Thuli–Makwe Dam is a reservoir on the Thuli River, west of Gwanda, in southwestern Zimbabwe. The dam has the capacity to hold 8.3 million cubic metres. [1]