Namwater Desalination Plant Explained

Namwater Desalination Plant
Location Map:Namibia
Location:Wlotzkasbaken, Erongo Region, Namibia
Coordinates:-22.3983°N 14.4572°W
Estimated Output:20000000m2 of water annually
Extended Output:30000000m2 of water annually
Technology:Filtration, Reverse osmosis, Chlorination
Operation Date: (Expected)

The Namwater Desalination Plant, is a sea water desalination plant under development in Namibia. The facility is being developed by Namwater, the national water utility parastatal company of Namibia. It is intended to address the severe water scarcity in the middle Namibia coastal area, in the Erongo Region, and in the capital city of Windhoek.[1] [2]

Location

The desalination plant would be located in the Namib Desert, near the settlement of Wlotzkasbaken, in the Erongo Region of Namibia. This new plant would sit adjacent to the privately owned Erongo Desalination Plant, commercially commissioned in 2010. The land that will host the new plant was donated to Namwater by the Erongo Regional Council.[3]

Wlotzkasbaken is located approximately 35km (22miles) north of Swakopmund, the nearest large town and approximately 390km (240miles) by road, west of Windhoek, the national capital and largest city in the country.

Overview

Namibia is an arid, water-stressed country.[4] As of 2024, the Erongo Region sources its potable water from (a) groundwater aquifers from the Omaruru Delta, (b) the Kuiseb Delta and (c) desalinated water from the Erongo Desalination Plant. The water sources are "interconnected by a network of pump stations, pipelines, and reservoirs".[1] [5]

However, with an increasing urban population, increasing mining activity, increased agricultural production and industrial demand, the above three water sources are close to their maximum utility and provide just under 30000000m2 of potable water annually.[4] [5]

In view of the above, in 2024, the government of Namibia authorized the construction of a new modular desalination plant with initial capacity output of 20000000m2 of potable water annually, expandable, as and when necessary.[1] [4] [5]

Developers

The national water utility parastatal, Namwater is the owner and main developer of this project. Collaborating with Namwater is the Chinese-owned Swakop Uranium Mine. The development has been in the pipeline since 1998.[3] [4] The plans were updated in 2016, after the government turned down an offer to buy the privately owned Erongo Desalination plant at a cost of NAD3 billion (approximately US$164 million in 2024 money).[3] [4] The situation is made more dire by the severe drought conditions affecting the countries of Southern Africa, including Namibia in the third decade of the 21st century (2021 - 2030).[6]

Cost

The development of this water treatment plant is estimated to cost N$3.5 billion (approx. US$191 million) in 2024.[2]

Timetable

Construction is scheduled to begin in Q1 2025, with commercial commissioning planned in H1 2027.[2] [7]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: . Huaxia . Namibia to construct new desalination plant to meet rising water demand . 26 June 2024 . 28 June 2024 . Beijing, China.
  2. Web site: . Second Desalination Plant Coming . 16 April 2024 . Eveline de Klerk . 28 June 2024 . Windhoek, Namibia.
  3. Web site: . Government Gets Land For Coastal Desalination Plant – NamWater . 31 May 2023 . Andreas Thomas . 28 June 2024 . Windhoek, Namibia.
  4. Web site: Namibia Approves Urgent Measures To Combat Looming Water Crisis . . 1 March 2024 . Huaxia . 28 June 2024 . Beijing, China.
  5. Web site: Government Approves Construction of Second Desalination Plant . 27 June 2024 . . Namibia Economist . 24 July 2024 . Windhoek, Namibia.
  6. Web site: 22 April 2024 . Severe Drought in Southern Africa . . NASA Earth Observatory . 28 June 2024 . United States.
  7. Web site: . Desalination plant construction set for January . 6 August 2024 . Shania Lazarus . 6 August 2024 . Windhoek, Namibia.