Napier
water crisis: 'There is no need for panic buying'
Napier
water crisis: 'There is no need for panic buying'
5
December, 2017
It's
been almost a month since Palmerston North, Masterton and Levin had
more than one-millimetre of rain.
Napier's only been without rain for a week but could run out of water very soon if water restrictions are ignored.
Other
places around the country are also imposing restrictions, as
temperatures soar past 30 degrees in some regions.
Napier
residents got the alarming message yesterday afternoon that their
city was in danger of running out of water.
Residents
are this morning waking to water in their taps, but are asked not to
use too much.
An
extra delivery of bottled water was sent to Napier supermarkets
overnight.
A
spokesperson for Foodstuffs, which runs Pak 'N Save and New World
supermarkets, said bottled water sales were extremely brisk
yesterday, but there is no need for panic buying.
As
well as the overnight water delivery, another shipment is on the way
to Napier today and extra deliveries will continue until the water
situation in the city settles down.
The
council said reservoirs are critically low because residents had been
leaving hoses and taps on overnight.
Now
they're banned from watering gardens and washing their cars.
Just
hours after the ban was announced water levels at the reservoirs
started dropping more slowly.
The
council's director of infrastructure Jon Kingsford said that's a
welcome sign that people are cutting back.
He
said in some suburbs water was coming out of the taps black partly
because a new bore is pushing water through pipes in a different
direction stirring up sediment.
He
said staff are being sent to clean the pipes and in the meantime
people with the problem are best to run their taps for 20 minutes or
so, until the water runs clear.
The
Hawke's Bay Regional Council's Ian Lilburn said the water shortage is
restricted to Napier and the hot weather is not causing any supply
problems outside of the city.
In
Gisborne water use has sky-rocketed over the past couple of days but
there are no plans for any bans yet while further south in Wellington
people are still not allowed to use garden sprinklers.
Christchurch
residents are being asked to save water after almost half-a-billion
litres of water was used in the garden city over the weekend.
Councils
around Canterbury are getting ready for a hot summer, with some towns
already reaching 30 degrees celsius.
A
Christchurch City Council spokesperson, John Mackie, said last
weekend saw the most water used in a weekend since 2009, with 250
million litres of water used on Sunday alone.
Mr
Mackie said residents need to start conserving water, otherwise the
city will soon have supply problems and a drop in water pressure.
Water
restrictions have not yet been introduced in the city.
In
Otago plummeting river levels have stopped farmers taking water for
irrigation from the Taieri River and there are also restrictions on
the Pomahaka and Kakanui.
Farmer
Gavan Herlihy said the past three weeks have been hard going.
Mr
Herlihy might get his rain as early as Friday, up north in Napier no
rain is expected until next Tuesday
Meteorologist
Hannah Moes yesterday told RNZ the ridge which has been over the
country for a couple of weeks is starting to move east, but the hot
weather should stick around for the rest of the week.
"There
is a bit of a respite for the eastern centres on Wednesday, a very
weak southerly will come through but it will still be warm with
temperatures in the 20s, just not as high as 30.
"Comparing
temperatures from this year to last year, this year we are in the
late 20s to early 30s, whereas at the start of summer last year
temperatures were in the mid to late teens."
Temperatures
throughout New Zealand are also an average two degrees warmer due to
La NiƱa, which causes high pressure.
Ocean
temperatures off the West Coast are reaching levels that are 6.5
degrees more than normal, and is expected to rise even further his
summer.
Niwa
meteorologist Ben Noll says things could get even hotter.
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