Water restrictions may be on the cards for Christchurch
Water restrictions could be imposed in Christchurch to
help meet the May deadline for removing chlorine from the
city’s water supply.
Christchurch City Council Water Supply Improvement Programme Manager Helen Beaumont has prepared a report for Thursday’s Council meeting which recommends introducing level three water restrictions.
Level three water restrictions permit people to water their gardens on alternate days only, using hand-held hoses. Unattended hoses, sprinklers or garden irrigation systems cannot be used when level three restrictions are in place.
In her report, Ms Beaumont says imposing water restrictions now will help reduce demand for water and potentially allow for a larger number of wells to be made secure by May.
“If we can significantly reduce the demand for water we would be able to carry out improvement works on a larger number of wells over the next few weeks,’’ Ms Beaumont says.
To date 39 of Christchurch’s 140 wells have been upgraded and signed off as secure.
Based on the current work programme 90 per cent of the city’s water supply will be chlorine-free by the end of May. One hundred per cent of the network will be chlorine free by October.
Key things you need to know
A
running tap.The Council is aiming to have a chlorine-free
water supply by the end of May.
Work to accelerate the
upgrade of the well heads across Christchurch began in
February 2018.
To date 39 out of 140 wells have been
upgraded and signed off as secure.
Chlorine treatments
stops at a pump station when wells that feed into the pump
station have been signed off as secure.
To date nine pump
stations are fed by secure wells and do not require chlorine
treatment.
Four other pump stations are able to operate
without chlorine as times of low demand.
The indicative
timetable for the upgrade of the remaining well heads would
see approximately 90 per cent of the city’s water
delivered without chlorine disinfection by the end of
May.
An ultraviolet disinfection system is going to be
installed at one of the city’s biggest pump stations, but
work on it is unlikely to be finished until the end of June.
At that point 95 per cent of the city’s water supply
should be chlorine-free.
On the current timetable it will
be October before 100 per cent of the city is
chlorine-free.
The water supply network is being managed
to maximise the delivery from pump stations without
chlorine.
The initial chlorine dose has been reduced at
21 pump stations.
Changes are being made to the water
supply network this month to reduce the dose at another four
pump
stations.