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  2. Vaal Dam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaal_Dam

    The construction of Vaal Dam started during the depression of the early thirties and the dam was completed in 1938 with a wall height of 54.2 metres (178 ft) above lowest foundation and a full supply capacity of 994,000,000 cubic metres (3.51 × 10 10 cu ft). The dam is a concrete gravity structure with an earthfill section on the right flank.

  3. Johannesburg Emergency Water Supply - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johannesburg_Emergency...

    This was the largest irrigation scheme in the southern hemisphere at that time, [6] the project also created another key source of water for the Rand Water Board. This dam became a part of the Vaal River Catchment System. Which is made up of four subcatchment regions ( Grootdraai, Waterval, Wilge and the Vaal Dam reservoir). [7]

  4. Vaal Barrage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaal_Barrage

    The Vaal River Barrage Reservoir is a dam on the Vaal River near Vanderbijlpark, border Gauteng and Free State, South Africa. The Barrage, created by a set of gates across the Vaal River, was built by Rand Water downstream of the Vaal Dam, in 1923. The reservoir is 64 kilometres long and has a total storage capacity of 63 million litres, a ...

  5. Tugela Vaal Transfer Scheme - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tugela_Vaal_Transfer_Scheme

    The Tugela Vaal water Transfer Scheme is an irrigation project developed in the Drakensberg mountains at the Oliviershoek Pass in South Africa. [1] The project will thus allow the annual transfer from the Tugela basin (in KwaZulu-Natal) of 630 million m3 of water to the Vaal basin (in the Free State) in the north, and ultimately the Vaal dam in ...

  6. Rand Water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rand_Water

    Rand Water provides potable water to metropolitan and local municipalities, industry and mining in Gauteng, and parts of Mpumalanga, the Free State, and North West provinces. [7] Rand Water has water network of 3 500 km of pipelines, 60 reservoirs, supplying 4 520 million litres of water daily to its varied customers.

  7. List of dams in South Africa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_dams_in_South_Africa

    This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items. (May 2009) Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap Download coordinates as: KML GPX (all coordinates) GPX (primary coordinates) GPX (secondary coordinates) The following is a partial list of dams in South Africa. In South African English (as well as Afrikaans), a dam refers to both the wall as well as the reservoir or lake that ...

  8. City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_Tshwane...

    As of 2016, City of Tshwane receives 72% of its bulk water from Rand Water, which utilizes the Integrated Vaal River System. The remaining 28% of Tshwane's water is sourced from its own treatment plants and boreholes. Water restrictions are implemented during drought, heat waves or other seasonal changes.

  9. Water Board (South Africa) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_Board_(South_Africa)

    Rand Water (Johannesburg, Gauteng) Sedibeng Water (Bothaville, Free State) (formerly Goudveld Water) [8] Umgeni Water (Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu Natal) (Regional Office located in Durban) The following stock-watering Water Boards are to be transformed into water user associations (see National Water Act section 98(1)): [9] [10]