PDT Waste Water Treatment Plants

PDT Waste Water Treatment Plants Our Company specializes in Waste Water Treatment, installation of treatment tanks (corporate and private homes).

We also do treatment of Fat Traps in Restaurants and Fast Food outlets. The solution to numerous problems at houses, schools, hospitals, manufacturing industry, holiday resorts, guest houses and any other facility where large volumes of sewage needs treatment, is a PDT Waste Water Treatment system. We also do maintenance on all Waste Water Treatment Systems.

Recycle your WASTE WATER - give us a call 0846496111
09/09/2020

Recycle your WASTE WATER - give us a call 0846496111

Thank you CHICKEN LICKEN Galleria for the opportunity to treat your fat trap!
09/12/2019

Thank you CHICKEN LICKEN Galleria for the opportunity to treat your fat trap!

Thank you Pick n Pay GALLERIA for the opportunity to treat your Fat Traps!
21/11/2019

Thank you Pick n Pay GALLERIA for the opportunity to treat your Fat Traps!

Thank you McDonalds - ARBOUR TOWN and GALLERIA MALL for allowing us to treat your Fat Traps!
20/11/2019

Thank you McDonalds - ARBOUR TOWN and GALLERIA MALL for allowing us to treat your Fat Traps!

Resorting to the army is a clear admission of government’s failure to deal with the water crisis. By Liesl Louw-Vaudran ...
14/11/2018

Resorting to the army is a clear admission of government’s failure to deal with the water crisis. By Liesl Louw-Vaudran for ISS TODAY. 9 November 2018

South African Finance Minister Tito Mboweni has a new plan to solve the country’s water infrastructure crisis: send in the army. In his budget speech on 24 October Mboweni said the government was “dealing decisively and urgently” with the water crisis in the Vaal River system.

Serious pollution in the river is endangering the lives of up to three million people who depend directly on water from the Vaal. These are especially people in poor communities with no access to clean water and sanitation. The water also flows into the Vaal Dam, which supplies Gauteng – the country’s economic heartland.

Mboweni said he was happy to report that the President and the Minister of Defence had granted approval for the South African National Defence Force (SANDF) to help with “engineering and other expertise” to resolve the problem. ‘The generals in charge have already started working on solutions,’ said Mboweni.
The step has been hailed by commentators as an example of decisive action by the government. Journalist Stephen Grootes wrote in Daily Maverick that the announcement “shows that government is acting, and acting drastically. In other words, for many people, it is a symbol of how seriously government takes their problem. It is hard to think of a stronger symbol than the sight of soldiers and military equipment literally declaring war on service delivery problems”.

Really? While South Africans will agree that service delivery – especially the provision of clean water – should be tackled head on, not everyone agrees that seeing soldiers doing the work inspires confidence in government’s capacity to do its job. Instead, it raises questions about whether effective and lasting solutions are being found.

Eric Pelser, head of the Institute for Security Studies (ISS) ENACT programme on organised crime believes that “there can be no greater admission of municipal failure than the deployment of the military”.

Using the military for civil infrastructure development in Africa is never a good idea, he says. “It usually ends in tears – just ask the Ghanaians, Nigerians or Liberians. It starts small, a road here, a clinic there, and then the generals think, we do this well, and it escalates until the generals think they’re better than the politicians”.

South Africa’s post-apartheid military is not a threat to the country’s stability, as may be the case in many other African countries. It has never shown any signs of interfering in politics as has happened elsewhere where soldiers are heavily involved in the intimidation of voters, harassment of the opposition and sometimes even coup d’états. Think Zimbabwe.

On the contrary, civil society and South Africa’s opposition react quickly to any signs of such interference. In early 2017, for example, the opposition Economic Freedom Fighters accused former president Jacob Zuma of “unleashing the army on the people of South Africa” when it was announced that soldiers would help maintain law and order during the annual State of the Nation debate. Parliament had to quickly respond by saying no SANDF member would be deployed in the parliamentary precinct.

Apart from the army’s historical hands-off approach to politics, some question whether the SANDF would even be capable of any real interference. Over the years the defence budget and the capacity of the military have dwindled. Presently the SANDF is mainly deployed on the country’s borders and in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, with just over 1,000 troops as part of the United Nations force there.

The SANDF has in the past intervened in severe national crises such as floods and heavy snowfalls. Recently it helped beef up health systems in the North West province and is also planning to build bridges in the Eastern Cape. The SANDF explained that this was part of “Operation Chariot”, an effort to “provide humanitarian and disaster relief” to citizens.
South Africa’s constitution allows the army to be deployed “for service in the preservation of life, health or property; for service in the provision or maintenance of essential services; and for service in support of any department of state for the purpose of socio-economic upliftment”. But perhaps the question is less about the SANDF’s legal mandate, and more about what this particular choice reveals about government’s capacity to deliver fundamental services, and fix deep-rooted problems when delivery collapses. “We need to avoid a situation where the army is routinely used to step in when municipalities fail to deliver,” says Pelser.

Working with the Water Research Commission, recent ISS analysis has shown that South Africa loses 36% of its municipal water through leaks from damaged infrastructure and treats less than 60% of its waste water. Solving the country’s water crisis, the research says, is as much about technical solutions as it is about political will and significant financial investments.

“The breakdown in the water system is not due to a natural disaster – it’s due to corruption, ineptitude, bad planning and a lack of accountability,” Pelser says. “The issue should be dealt with via the municipal assistance fund, the police and the prosecution service.”

This is supported by civil rights organisations such as the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse and Save the Vaal, who point out that the pollution in the river isn’t due only to the malfunctioning of outdated infrastructure – something the army might be able to fix.

It is also the result of inefficiency and corruption in the Emfuleni Municipality, which has been accused of non-compliance with basic service delivery requirements.

Following Mboweni’s speech, the SANDF sent a mission to assess the situation in the river, which has been described as “criminal behaviour” because the municipality’s inaction poses a threat to millions of lives. Only after the mission by military engineers will recommendations be made about how to deal with the problem.
Mboweni eloquently warned in his budget speech that South Africa might be in a Dickensian “age of foolishness”. Hopefully this does not apply to the plan to send in the army to repair South Africa’s water infrastructure, while other urgent solutions remain unattended.

Minister Gugile Nkwinti hosts Ministerial interactive session with Water and Sanitation sector, 10 NovMinister Nkwinti t...
06/11/2018

Minister Gugile Nkwinti hosts Ministerial interactive session with Water and Sanitation sector, 10 Nov

Minister Nkwinti to host a Ministerial Interactive Session with Water and Sanitation sector to help address challenges in the sector

Members of the media are invited to a Ministerial Interactive Session to be convened by Minister Gugile Nkwinti at a Water and Sanitation Innovation and Technology Solutions Exhibition on Saturday, 10 November 2018 at Birchwood Hotel, Boksburg.

The exhibition and conference, themed “Innovations today for tomorrow’s water and sanitation solutions” will see more than 50 emerging and established innovators from across the country showcasing and engaging with sector leaders about innovative solutions to challenges currently faced by the water and sanitation sector.

Minister Nkwinti and his Deputy Ms Pamela Tshwete are set to actively engage innovators on matters including water purification and waste water package plants, dual strategy; desalinated, ground and surface water, the acceleration of eradication of buckets and contribution to Green and Blue Drop reports, amongst others.

A platform will also be afforded to innovators from the historically disadvantaged backgrounds, with the focus geared towards women and young innovators in the sector. They will showcase their work and share experiences of the innovation landscape to date.

Industry stakeholders from national, provincial and local government, as well as water entities will be in attendance in an effort to galvanize them to use and invest in these technologies to meet the current demands faced by the sector at large.

NEWS 24 - 31/10/2018Water dept leaking senior staff as Nkwinti tightens the tap on probes into corruptionThe embattled D...
01/11/2018

NEWS 24 - 31/10/2018

Water dept leaking senior staff as Nkwinti tightens the tap on probes into corruption

The embattled Department of Water and Sanitation is suffering from a leadership crisis as many officials in top posts have either been suspended or have "run away" from probes into corruption, Water and Sanitation Minister Gugile Nkwinti said.
"We have no director general, no chief financial officer, no financial manager. Others left too. As soon as they were held to account, they ran away. And we have two deputy directors general facing disciplinary action," he said.

This comes after President Cyril Ramaphosa authorised the Special Investigating Unit to probe suspected corruption in the department and the private sector in the awarding of tenders.

"But we're going to get things right," vowed the minister on Wednesday. "We've got some very good chief directors, some excellent young professionals. But with human beings, you can't turn them around in 24 hours. You've got to be patient."

Nkwinti spoke to News24 after attending a portfolio committee meeting where a University of Johannesburg economist, Dr Washington Nyabele, made a presentation on the implications of the medium-term budget policy on the water and sanitation department.

Nyabele told the committee the department was facing a serious dilemma.

"We are going nowhere slowly."

Appointment of advisory committee recommended

Nyabele said when he compared the department's targets with the medium-term budget he "almost got a heart attack, and high blood pressure because I saw things are not where they should be".

The first of six recommendations Nyabele made to the committee and the minister was that immediate steps be taken to plug the leadership gaps in the ailing department.

"This is critical and a matter of urgency," he said.

Without leadership, the department was rudderless and was going nowhere.

Another important recommendation was that the minister appoints, as a matter of urgency, a National Water Advisory Committee.

This committee, appointed in terms of the Water Act, is comprised of people from civil society, the business sector, academia and water experts who hold three-year appointments during which time they provide advice to the minister.

Billions in wasteful expenditure

"We need to have the best team sitting with the minister and use it for planning and strategic thinking. We need a core group, dedicated, and then we can move," Nyabele said.

The previous committee dissolved under the former minister Nomvula Mokonyane.

Mokonyane was removed from her post by President Ramaphosa in February and replaced by Nkwinti.

Nkwinti has admitted to Parliament that the department he inherited was "a mess" and was struggling to cope.

Wasteful expenditure had risen to between R6bn and R8bn under Mokonyane.

LEEUWFONTEIN ESTATES - Thank you for granting us the opportunity to do maintenance on all your Waste Water Treatment Pla...
30/10/2018

LEEUWFONTEIN ESTATES - Thank you for granting us the opportunity to do maintenance on all your Waste Water Treatment Plants - 086 649 6111

Amanzimtoti residents, frustrated at the erratic availability and collection of the orange refuse bags, are advised to d...
22/10/2018

Amanzimtoti residents, frustrated at the erratic availability and collection of the orange refuse bags, are advised to dispose of recyclables with normal domestic waste. That is until October, when hopefully a newly-appointed contractor will start to supply new bags.

Residents have been left frustrated and in the dark for years on whether the bags will be delivered and collected by the contractor appointed by eThekwini Municipality. With collection erratic, often the bags are left on the side of the road indefinitely until monkeys tear them apart, and paper and plastic gets scattered around the neighbourhood. Local residents have shown they are keen to recycle but the project is difficult to support when you don’t know if the bags will be collected.

Ward 97 councillor, Andre Beetge said the city currently has no contract in place with a service provider for the exclusive collection of recycle bags. “The preferred service providers who were previously tasked with this responsibility failed against expectation, resulting in termination of contract. The city has, for the interim, engaged an alternative supplier to facilitate the exercise.”

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