Facebook Pixel River is a 'chemical cocktail' | Mail & Guardian - newspaper - Les denne historien på Magzter.com
Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Gå ubegrenset med Magzter GOLD

Få ubegrenset tilgang til over 9000 magasiner, aviser og premiumhistorier for bare

$149.99
 
$74.99/År

Prøve GULL - Gratis

River is a 'chemical cocktail'

Mail & Guardian

|

M&G 24 October 2025

A study showed contamination from heavy metals, pharmaceuticals and banned pesticides

- Sheree Bega

Every drop of river water tells a story about the kinds of medicine we take, the chemicals we use and the lifestyle choices we make, says scientist Shaskia John and it's not just about nature.

"What we consume, we excrete and the wastewater plants will reflect that ... Our rivers are lifestyle markers," John, an aquatic ecologist, told the Mail & Guardian on the sidelines of the recent Oppenheimer Research Conference where she presented on legacy and emerging contaminants in the Crocodile River catchment.

Now in its 14th year, the conference brought together researchers, policymakers and conservation leaders to advance African-led solutions to the biodiversity and climate crisis.

John examined seasonal shifts in water quality, testing chemical loads in surface water and fish muscle tissue. She screened for 22 metals, 274 pesticides and 21 pharmaceuticals — uncovering alarming levels in the ecologically critical river catchment.

"Rivers are the veins of ecosystems. They sustain livelihoods, they sustain biodiversity - but the Crocodile River catchment is slowly becoming a chemical cocktail."

The Crocodile River rises near Dullstroom, flows through the Nelspruit industrial area, feeds the Lowveld's farms and winds through the Kruger National Park to Mozambique.

"The agricultural, industrial and urban areas bring in chemicals, pharmaceuticals and pesticides as well as fertilisers into the river."

The river is ecologically important as it supports two key zones in its lower portion — the Krokodilpoort Nature Reserve and forms the southern border of the Kruger National Park — while sustaining farms, industries and expanding towns.

"It's one of the most used rivers in South Africa. It's a transboundary river," John added. "That means we have an international obligation to maintain certain water standards because the water supports communities and ecosystems downstream."

FLERE HISTORIER FRA Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Iran war a reset moment for Africa

On the other hand, many African countries rely heavily on imported fuel, and rising oil prices have resulted in higher transportation costs, increased food prices and broader inflation.

time to read

4 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Storyteller, scholar, star

Sihle-isipho Nontshokweni wins Best Actress for 'Sierra's Gold', marking a powerful return to acting with a fearless, eccentric performance rooted in vulnerability and truth

time to read

4 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

SA marks 32 years of democracy amid

South Africa's 32nd Freedom Day highlights both democratic gains and ongoing struggles with inequality, unemployment and poverty

time to read

2 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

The sound of freedom is not silence

Leaving the township can change your surroundings but unlearning the fear it taught your body is where the real work of freedom begins

time to read

5 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

'We are all complicit': Inside 'The Blue Album'

Blending performance and storytelling, Vuyelwa Maluleke interrogates belonging, language and lived experience in a work that is as intimate as it is unsettling

time to read

5 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

A nugget of hope in the inner city

I tweeted something this week that stuck with a lot of people: “An abandoned, hijacked CBD building turned into a fully let student housing success story.”

time to read

4 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Freedom in our lifetime

On Monday we hand over our report card to those — too numerous to mention — who laid down their lives for the freedom we enjoy.

time to read

2 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

The next stage of a rising R&B star

With a deluxe edition of her latest album on the way and a milestone performance only days away, Nanette is ready to step into the next stage of her ascendancy

time to read

5 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

No freedom without water

Across South Africa, communities are marking Freedom Day under the weight of an escalating water crisis, where unreliable supply, contamination and ageing infrastructure continue to undermine basic rights and deepen inequality

time to read

6 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Mail & Guardian

Mail & Guardian

Three decades on, SA story still evolves

The democratic breakthrough of 1994 stands as one of the most significant political achievements of the modern era. Against the odds, South Africa chose negotiation over civil conflict, ballots over bullets, reconciliation over revenge

time to read

5 mins

M&G 24 April 2026

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size