The Ndjili provides the main supply of water to
Kinshasa, but tends to be polluted with human waste.
Kinshasa had two water treatment stations before independence, one on the
Lukunga River and one at
Ngaliema bay on the
Congo River. By 1985, they were both extremely dilapidated. A new station was built on the Ndikili at Kingbabwe in the
Limete commune in two phases, one funded by
the Belgian government, in 1971, and the second by
the German government, in 1982. The French agreed to finance a second station on the Ndjili, but suspended aid to
President Mobutu, in October 1991. A third Ndjili station, funded by the Japanese government, was also cancelled due to the September 1991 lootings. The result was a failure to meet even minimum water supply needs. The river catchment has sandy soils and steep topography, as with other rivers that supply the city. With clearing of the forests, there has been growing soil erosion, leading to sediment pollution. When turbidity levels rise above the 1,000 NTU limit, which has often been reported in the Ndjili and
Lukaya rivers during the rainy season, water purification plants have to stop their operations. Imported chemical coagulants and imported lime are needed to keep the plants in operation. On a positive note, after a four-year, 51 million euro project, financed by the
World Bank, in 2009, the Ndjili plant doubled its capacity to daily. The plant can now provide nearly 65% of Kinshasa's water supply. ==Market gardening==