What’s keeping the Okavango Delta alive?
NGCreativeWorks
Published December 20, 2023
Call it luck―or magic―but somehow two of Africa’s driest countries get a reliable source of water supplied to them from a third. A network of rivers and lakes clustered in Angola’s remote highlands feeds two rivers, the Cuito and Cubango, which then combine into the Kavango River in Namibia before crossing into Botswana as the Okavango River. It’s the unlikely circulatory system that supports not only the Okavango Delta, but also many miles of rural communities and wildlife that have next to no other water sources. A lot is at stake if this water were to disappear or become otherwise unusable, which is why the National Geographic and De Beers Okavango Eternal Partnership lends support into understanding how these rivers work, what could affect them, and how to make sure they remain healthy and viable. Having recently returned from the 2023 expedition along the Namibia section of the Cubango, Götz Neef, research manager under the OE partnership, answers some of the bigger questions about the partnership’s ongoing research.
Can you tell us why you’ve chosen to focus on the Cubango portion of the Okavango River in Namibia? What are the unique challenges it faces?
It’s a key lifeline of a river. The Cuito feeds a constant flow down, but the Cubango is the pulse—that bigger, more rocky force playing rhythm. And as it rains in the headwater area [in Angola] it creates these pulses that come through. A portion of that river is very important to Namibia [known as the Kavango locally], with it being such a dry country, we don’t have many permanent rivers.
During the first expedition we noticed quite a lot of human activity along the Cubango, that made us realize we need to focus a bit more on the Namibian section of the river. Scientific interest into the Namibian portion is mainly to understand how the river is utilized, the impacts of humans on the river, and the economic background behind that. Hopefully, we’ll be able to draw out what can be done to help both biodiversity and people benefit from the river.
A source lake for the Cuito River in Angola. Rainwater collects here before slowly seeping through peat deposits, giving the Cuito a constant, gentle supply.
A source lake for the Cuito River in Angola. Rainwater collects here before slowly seeping through peat deposits, giving the Cuito a constant, gentle supply.
Photograph by Steve Spence
Partnering with local communities is essential to Okavango Eternal’s work; how has traditional knowledge helped on these river expeditions?
In Namibia itself we have local people on the team to guide us, and their Indigenous knowledge is invaluable when we enter a sacred place called Andara. Some of the old kings from the tribes were buried there; it’s a very mystical place where you have lots of little islands and the river just splits up into rapids.
