eThekwini coastline a devastating tourism sector, when water samples contain E. coli levels exceeding South African regulatory limits, authorities must close beaches and conduct daily testing until concentrations drop below safe thresholds. Beaches typically experience high bacterial loads after major rainstorms, as land-based contaminants quickly transfer into coastal waters. Some locations face greater contamination risk due to water circulation patterns, beach layout, surrounding land use, or nearby storm water outfalls.
The floods damaged large sections of wastewater reticulation pipelines, increasing the volume of untreated wastewater flowing into the ocean from South Africa’s third-largest metro. Adding to these concerns is the untreated chemical and domestic effluent flowing from various industries and businesses across this popular tourist destination.
The eThekwini Municipality operates at least 27 wastewater treatment works, 289 sewer pump stations, and more than 9,000km of wastewater pipelines. The floods have caused major damage to one in three of these essential treatment facilities, while an unknown number remain completely non-functional.
MEB has been supporting utilities and protecting the environment by providing safe decentralized water and wastewater treatment emergency response solutions. We deploy these systems directly at affected locations for optimal service delivery, using advanced tools and technology innovations to preserve public health, maintain water quality, and reduce wastewater pollution risks.
Want to learn more about our proven portfolio of solutions? Contact us today!


