A newly discovered water source could supply half of Africa's driest sub-Saharan country with 400 years of water, reports Matt McGrath of BBC. The new aquifer – called Ohangwena II – flows under the
border between Angola and Namibia, covering an area of about 43 miles by
25 miles on Namibia's side.
The water is up to 10,000 years old and cleaner to drink than many modern sources.
Currently the 800,000 people living in the northern
part of the country get their drinking water from a 40-year-old canal
that brings the scarce resource from Angola.Ohangwena II could change the nature of
farming in the area, which has only been viable near two rivers in the
region, and could act as a natural buffer for up to 15 years of drought.
Natural pressure will make the water easy and cheap to extract.
However, the new supply sits
on a smaller, salty aquifer, raising the possibility that unauthorized
drilling could lead to the water sources contaminating each other.
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