Mthuli Ncube taps Dutch grant to clean toxic Lake Chivero water

Half the money is free, the lake is toxic, and Zimbabwe just pulled a high-tech, low-risk play to stop Harare’s water source from turning into a health hazard.

The funding twist that changes everything
  • The Lake Chivero cleanup is backed by €19.8 million in total.
  • Fifty percent comes as a grant from the Dutch government, cutting Zimbabwe’s financial risk hard.
  • Less debt exposure, more room to use advanced tech.
Where the announcement came from
  • The Ministry of Finance, Economic Development, and Investment Promotion confirmed the plan in Harare.
  • Finance Minister Mthuli Ncube met LG Sonic CEO Yousef Yousef at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
  • The focus was one thing: fixing Lake Chivero for good.
Why Lake Chivero is in trouble
  • Lake Chivero supplies Harare and nearby areas.
  • Decades of untreated sewage, farm runoff, and industrial waste wrecked the ecosystem.
  • Toxic algal blooms took over, driven by cyanobacteria.
  • Fish kills pushed the situation from bad to urgent.
The technology being lined up
  • LG Sonic uses ultrasound to mess with algae growth cycles.
  • No chemicals involved, which matters a lot for aquatic life.
  • Real-time monitoring tracks oxygen, nutrients, and algae levels.
  • The system helps biodiversity recover instead of nuking everything.
Why this tech is trusted
  • The same approach is already running in more than 60 countries.
  • It aims to clear water, cut toxins, and stabilize ecosystems.
  • Fish, plants, and other organisms stay intact.
What the government wants long-term
  • A five-year restoration program is on the table.
  • The plan leans on chemical-free methods and constant monitoring.
  • The end goal is a safe, productive, climate-resilient lake.
  • Better governance and stronger institutions are baked into the vision.
How does this help Harare’s water bills
  • Harare spends about US$3 million every month on water treatment chemicals.
  • Most of those chemicals are imported.
  • Only aluminium sulphate and chlorine gas are sourced locally.
  • Poor raw water quality keeps pushing costs higher and supply shakier.
Who caused most of the pollution
  • Untreated sewage from Harare City Council is the main driver.
  • Industrial and urban waste adds to the mess.
  • The Environmental Management Authority has repeatedly named the City of Harare as the biggest polluter.
The moment things got deadly
  • In 2024, four rhinos and other animals died after drinking lake water.
  • That incident highlighted just how concentrated the toxins had become.
  • The ecosystem was already in deep collapse by then.
Government’s parallel water plan
  • In 2023, a technical committee was set up to stabilize Harare’s water system.
  • Targets include holding production near 520 megalitres per day.
  • Non-revenue water is meant to drop from 59 percent to 55 percent.
  • Potable water access is supposed to rise from 40 percent to 60 percent.
Why non-revenue water hurts
  • This is treated water lost to leaks, theft, or bad meters.
  • It never reaches users despite being paid for in production costs.
Public health fallout
  • Harare Province has suffered two major cholera outbreaks.
  • One hit in 2019, another in 2023.
  • The earlier outbreak killed more than 50 people.
  • Poor sanitation and unreliable clean water sat at the center of both crises.
Why timing matters
  • The Lake Chivero project lands as the government pushes Public-Private Partnerships.
  • Clean, reliable water is being framed as strategic infrastructure.
  • With half the funding free, the pressure is on to make this one work.
 

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