

African Tanks supplies durable galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks to buyers across Botswana. Tanks suit household, agricultural, mining, commercial, and community use – from Gaborone and Francistown to remote cattle posts in the Kalahari and diamond mining operations in the Central District.
Contact African Tanks directly for sizing, pricing, and delivery to your site.
African Tanks supplies galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks in Botswana for homes, farms, cattle operations, mining sites, and communities. Tanks range from 30,000 to 500,000 litres and beyond, with custom sizing available. As one of the driest countries in sub-Saharan Africa – where the Gaborone city dam has run dry and Ngamiland farmers have abandoned crops due to drought – steel tanks give buyers across Botswana the water independence that utility infrastructure and seasonal rainfall alone cannot guarantee.
Water storage is a broad term referring to the storage of both potable (safe to drink) and non-potable (not fit for consumption) water.
Many communities in Botswana face water shortages due to drought, unreliable utility supply, and vast distances from WUC infrastructure in rural areas.
Water reservoirs keep communities hydrated through rainwater collection and grey water storage when seasonal supply fails.
Private homes, small and large businesses, factories, and warehouses benefit from storing water – reducing costs and providing emergency capacity when supply cuts occur.
With climate change intensifying drought cycles across the Kalahari Basin, unpredictable seasonal rainfall, and escalating WUC utility costs, water storage solutions are now essential for buyers across Botswana.
Botswana is a semi-arid country long affected by drought. However, recent drought cycles have intensified, placing water security at the top of the agenda for households, farmers, and businesses in 2026.
The Water Utilities Corporation (WUC) manages supply in Gaborone, Francistown, Maun, and other towns, but the system remains under constant pressure.
Gaborone’s main reservoir has run dry during recent droughts, forcing alternate-day water restrictions and exposing the vulnerability of centralised supply when rainfall fails across key catchments.
Beyond the capital, rural Botswana faces even greater challenges. Across the Kalahari and districts such as Ngamiland, prolonged drought has forced some farmers to abandon crops and livestock. At the same time, the mining sector, including operations in Jwaneng, Orapa, and Selibe-Phikwe, requires large volumes of water for processing and daily operations.
As a result, water storage tanks in Botswana have become essential infrastructure across all sectors. Galvanized and bolted steel tanks provide reliable reserves that maintain supply during extended dry periods and reduce dependence on inconsistent rainfall or utility systems.
Galvanized steel tanks are the best choice for Botswana’s Kalahari and semi-arid climate. Because summer temperatures often exceed 40°C and UV exposure is extreme, plastic tanks typically degrade within five to eight years.
In contrast, galvanized steel tanks use a zinc coating that resists heat and UV, delivering a lifespan of 20 to 30 years. In addition, steel handles the large daily temperature swings common in the Kalahari, from hot days to cold nights, without structural fatigue.
As a result, water storage tanks in Botswana made from galvanized steel provide the most durable and reliable long-term solution for arid environments.
Worsening climatic conditions only emphasise the depth of droughts and the crisis of water quality in Botswana. Botswana is a semi-arid country and no stranger to drought.
However, recent drought years have put a severe strain on the agricultural practices that support most households living in rural areas. In Ngamiland, drought led to widespread hunger and some farmers had to stop farming and instead make furniture for extra income.
This affected food security, which ultimately impacted on nutrition, especially for children.
The drought also had a major impact on the capital city, Gaborone. The city dam ran dry. Access to tap water was restricted to alternate days only, and people had to find other ways of meeting their daily water needs.
African Tanks provides portable water storage solutions ideal for areas in Botswana with known water shortages.
Emergency water storage – such as rainwater collection and water harvesting tanks – supports households, rural farming communities, and cattle operations across the country.
Stored rainwater suits the following uses once collected:
Water tanks serve buyers across Botswana in ways that extend well beyond basic household backup. Cattle farmers across the Central District, diamond and copper mining operations in the east, and NGO water programmes in remote Kalahari communities all depend on bulk storage to maintain consistent water access through Botswana’s eight-month dry season.
Common uses include:
Cattle farming is central to Botswana’s rural economy and culture, but reliable water supply remains the biggest constraint on cattle post operations. Seasonal pans and rivers typically dry up from April, leaving herders dependent on boreholes that may fail or underperform during extended droughts.
As a result, water storage tanks in Botswana are critical for livestock operations. A 50,000 to 250,000 litre galvanized tank provides a herd of 100 to 500 cattle with a two to four week reserve without relying on boreholes.
For larger operations, commercial ranches and feedlots in the Central and Kgatleng Districts often require 500,000 litres or more to maintain supply through prolonged dry periods. Contact African Tanks for a cattle operation sizing consultation based on your herd size and location
African Tanks manufactures four main tank types for buyers in Botswana. Each suits different volume requirements, site conditions, and budget profiles. Galvanized and steel tanks cover the majority of household, farm, and commercial applications, while bolted and sectional systems serve larger infrastructure projects and remote Kalahari sites far beyond road networks.
Steel tanks from African Tanks handle the largest bulk water storage requirements in Botswana – from Jwaneng and Orapa diamond mine operations and their associated townships to large commercial cattle ranches and municipal buffer reservoirs.
For buyers that need 500,000 litres and above, steel tanks deliver the structural strength and capacity that no other product matches. Teams install them on prepared concrete bases at accessible sites across Botswana’s road network.
Galvanized tanks are the most popular choice for Botswana households, schools, clinics, smallholder farms, and cattle posts.
The zinc coating resists Botswana’s extreme heat, intense UV, and the harsh dust that scours the Kalahari through the long dry season in ways that plastic tanks simply cannot. Beyond that, galvanized steel outlasts plastic by 20 to 30 years under Kalahari conditions – making it the most cost-effective long-term solution for buyers across the country.
Tanks range from 10,000 to 1,000,000 litres, with the 50,000 to 250,000 litre range most common for rural household and cattle post applications.
Bolted tanks give buyers at remote cattle posts, Kalahari community water points, and mining exploration sites the ability to install large-capacity storage without road access for heavy equipment. African Tanks ships bolted tank components as flat panels that transport by light 4×4 to the end of the track and carry by hand from there.
Teams bolt the panels together on a prepared level base using standard hand tools – no crane needed. That modular approach makes bolted tanks the standard specification for remote Botswana sites where wheeled access ends long before the installation point. Capacities start at 100,000 litres and scale well beyond 1,000,000 litres.
Sectional tanks suit Botswana’s urban commercial and hospitality segment – hotels and office complexes in Gaborone’s CBD, apartment buildings, hospitals, and lodge facilities where installation access is constrained and building footprints are limited.
Panels arrive on site and bolt together within existing spaces. That flexibility makes sectional tanks the preferred choice for Gaborone’s property developers and commercial operators who need reliable storage without major construction disruption.
Capacities typically range from 10,000 to 500,000 litres.
| Tank Type | Capacity Range | Best Used For | Why It Suits Botswana |
| Steel tanks | 50,000 – 5,000,000+ L | Diamond and copper mines, large commercial ranches, municipal buffer storage | Structural strength for Botswana’s high-volume mining and bulk agricultural water demand |
| Galvanized tanks | 10,000 – 1,000,000 L | Households, schools, cattle posts, smallholder farms, safari lodges | Resists Kalahari heat, extreme UV, and dust – outlasts plastic by 20 to 30 years |
| Bolted tanks | 100,000 – 10,000,000+ L | Remote Kalahari cattle posts, mining exploration sites, community water points | Flat-pack panels reach any remote Botswana site where roads and heavy equipment cannot go |
| Sectional tanks | 10,000 – 500,000 L | Gaborone hotels, hospitals, commercial buildings, urban lodge facilities | Space-efficient where Gaborone urban access and existing building footprints are restricted |
A household of four to six people in Gaborone facing alternate-day WUC supply restrictions typically needs 10,000 to 20,000 litres to maintain continuous access. However, households in outer suburbs and peri-urban areas, where pressure is lowest and cuts are frequent, should target 20,000 to 30,000 litres.
In contrast, rural households in the Central, Kgatleng, and Southern Districts often rely on boreholes or seasonal sources. As a result, water storage tanks in Botswana should be sized at 30,000 to 100,000 litres to cover the long dry season without constant water hauling.
Contact African Tanks for a sizing consultation based on your household size, location, and water source.
Botswana’s water demand spans urban households, cattle and beef farming, diamond and copper mining, ecotourism, and rural community supply.
The table below helps buyers identify the right capacity range for their specific sector.
| Sector | Typical Capacity Needed | Why Storage is Critical Here |
| Residential / household | 10,000 – 100,000 L | WUC alternate-day restrictions in Gaborone; rural households far from utility infrastructure |
| Cattle farming / livestock | 50,000 – 500,000+ L | Kalahari cattle posts rely on stored water through the eight-month dry season when pans run dry |
| Diamond and copper mining | 500,000 – 10,000,000+ L | Jwaneng, Orapa, and Selibe-Phikwe operations need massive uninterrupted process and operational water |
| Arable farming / irrigation | 20,000 – 500,000 L | Sorghum, maize, and sunflower farmers in the arable east need dry season irrigation reserve |
| Ecotourism / safari lodges | 20,000 – 500,000 L | Okavango, Chobe, and Kalahari lodges need independent water supply far from utility networks |
| Municipal / community supply | 50,000 – 1,000,000+ L | Remote villages and cattle post communities beyond the WUC network need bulk independent storage |
| NGOs and development programmes | 50,000 – 500,000 L | WASH organisations supply community water points in Botswana’s most remote districts |
| Commercial / industrial | 100,000 – 5,000,000+ L | Gaborone industrial estates, food processing, and logistics hubs need uninterrupted water supply |
African Tanks has supplied bulk water storage solutions to buyers across Africa for over 35 years.
Every tank carries warranty protection and meets the quality standards that Botswana’s household, agricultural, mining, and community buyers require.
| Benefit | What It Means for Buyers in Botswana |
| Warranty protection | Every tank carries written warranty cover – important for remote Kalahari cattle posts and mining sites far from suppliers |
| Galvanized steel construction | Zinc coating resists Botswana’s extreme Kalahari heat, intense UV, and harsh dry season dust |
| Hygienic potable storage | Food-grade internal coatings keep drinking water safe through Botswana’s extreme summer temperatures |
| Modular panel design | Flat-pack bolted tank panels reach any remote Botswana site by light 4×4 and hand-carry beyond the tracks |
| Custom capacities | Tanks scale from household backup to bulk mining, municipal, and cattle ranch supply – no standard size required |
| Affordable long-term solution | Steel outlasts plastic by 20 to 30 years under Kalahari conditions – lower total cost across a full working life |
| After-sales support | African Tanks provides installation guidance and remote technical support from delivery through commissioning |
African Tanks offers the following standard capacity range for Botswana buyers, with custom sizes available on request:
Contact African Tanks for capacities beyond 500,000 litres, including bolted tank systems scaling to several million litres for mining, cooperative, and municipal applications.
Tank designs available in galvanized and steel construction:
Water tanks can be customized to suit your specific needs and connected to various types of water collection systems.
African Tanks designs and supplies custom storage for the following applications across Botswana:
Yes – African Tanks applies food-grade internal coatings and certified potable-grade liners to all tanks specified for drinking water storage.
The external zinc galvanizing protects against corrosion and UV degradation without affecting internal water quality. For buyers in Botswana, where supply restrictions and drought-driven shortfalls already strain clean water access, a certified potable-grade tank removes the contamination risk that unlined storage carries.
Confirm the potable-use specification at enquiry stage to ensure the correct internal coating ships with your tank.
Choosing the right tank size in Botswana starts with your water source and the length of the dry season at your location. In Gaborone, households facing alternate-day WUC restrictions should plan for 10,000 to 20,000 litres, enough to cover several days between supply windows.
However, outer suburbs with more frequent cuts should target 20,000 to 30,000 litres.
In rural areas, where households rely on boreholes or seasonal sources through an eight-month dry season, storage needs increase significantly.
As a result, water storage tanks in Botswana should typically range from 50,000 to 100,000 litres to avoid constant hauling.
Cattle farming is the largest driver of rural water demand. As a rule, allow 50 litres per animal per day. A herd of 200 cattle needs 10,000 litres daily, meaning a 100,000 litre tank provides ten days of reserve, while 300,000 litres provides roughly one month.
For larger ranches, 500,000 litres or more is the practical starting point.
For mining and commercial operations, tanks must cover peak demand plus a 25% buffer. Diamond mining sites require uninterrupted water for processing, so even short disruptions cause major losses. Bulk bolted steel tanks provide the necessary reserve to maintain operations during supply constraints.
Contact African Tanks for a free sizing consultation based on your water source, district, sector, and site conditions.
African Tanks manufactures all tanks in South Africa and delivers water storage tanks in Botswana via direct road freight to Gaborone, Francistown, Maun, Kasane, and all districts. Complete galvanized tanks arrive ready for installation on a prepared concrete base. In contrast, bolted and sectional panels ship flat, reducing freight volume and lowering landed costs for large-capacity systems.
For remote sites, including cattle posts, Kalahari community water points, and mining exploration areas, modular components are transported by 4×4 to the nearest accessible point. From there, crews carry panels by hand to the installation site.
As a result, tanks can be installed without cranes or heavy equipment. Assembly takes place on a level base using standard tools. African Tanks provides full installation guidance and remote technical support throughout, from site preparation to commissioning and first fill.
| Consideration | What to Think About |
| Daily water demand | Size for peak-use days, not averages – WUC alternate-day restrictions in Gaborone cut supply to every other day |
| Dry season duration | Botswana’s dry season runs approximately April to October across most districts – size storage to cover the full period |
| Livestock count | For cattle operations, calculate 50 litres per animal per day and size for at least 30 days of drought reserve |
| Water source type | WUC mains, borehole, seasonal pan, or rainwater harvesting – each source affects sizing differently |
| Potable vs non-potable use | Potable drinking water storage requires certified food-grade internal coatings – confirm at enquiry stage |
| Remote site access | Kalahari cattle posts and remote sites need flat-pack bolted systems – wheeled heavy equipment cannot reach most |
| Mining process water | Industrial and mining buyers must size for peak process demand plus a 25% operational buffer |
| Kalahari heat and UV | All outdoor tanks in Botswana must be galvanized steel – plastic degrades within five to eight years under Kalahari conditions |
| Expansion plans | Oversizing by 20% now costs less than adding a second tank later – factor herd growth and business expansion into the initial spec |
African Tanks serves buyers across Botswana with galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks suited to household, cattle farming, mining, ecotourism, NGO, and commercial use.
Whether your site is a peri-urban home in Gaborone, a cattle post in the Kalahari, a safari lodge in the Okavango, or a mining operation in the Central District, the team can size and quote a solution for you.
You can buy water storage tanks in Botswana directly from African Tanks. Tanks are manufactured in South Africa and delivered by road to Gaborone, Francistown, Maun, Kasane, and remote areas. As a result, buyers receive reliable delivery even to off-grid sites. Contact African Tanks for pricing and logistics.
Water tank prices in Botswana depend on capacity, tank type, and delivery location. A 30,000 to 50,000 litre galvanized tank is a common starting point for households. However, larger systems for farms, mining, or communities cost more. Overland freight keeps costs competitive compared to imports.
Size your tank based on herd size and a 30-day reserve. Allow 50 litres per animal per day.
As a result, properly sized tanks ensure livestock survival during drought.
Yes. African Tanks uses food-grade internal coatings and potable liners for drinking water storage. As a result, water remains safe and uncontaminated. Always confirm potable specification when ordering.
Steel tanks typically last 20 to 30 years in Botswana’s climate. Because they resist heat, UV, and dust, they last three to four times longer than plastic tanks.
Rainwater harvesting collects rainfall from roofs or surfaces for storage. In northern Botswana, rainfall ranges from 400 to 650 mm annually, making it viable. However, in drier regions it is supplementary.
Yes. Bolted tanks are designed for remote delivery. Panels transport by 4×4 and assemble on-site without cranes. As a result, tanks reach even deep Kalahari locations.
African Tanks supplies rectangular, circular, square, elevated, and custom tanks. Modular systems adapt to any site, from urban buildings to remote cattle posts.
Yes. All tanks include written warranty protection covering manufacturing defects. This is critical for remote operations where replacement costs are high.
Yes. Tanks connect to boreholes, gutters, and surface catchments. As a result, they provide a buffer during pump failure or low rainfall.
Galvanized tanks are welded steel units for standard access sites.
Bolted tanks assemble from panels and suit remote or large-capacity installations.
As a result, bolted tanks dominate in rural and mining applications.
Water storage is essential in Botswana. Because drought cycles and supply restrictions are increasing, tanks provide the most reliable water source for households, farms, and industry.
Households need 15,000 to 25,000 litres for basic backup.
Outer suburbs should target 30,000 litres.
Businesses require 50,000 to 100,000 litres for continuity.
Yes. Steel tanks last longer and perform better under extreme heat and UV.
Plastic tanks typically fail within 5 to 8 years.
A galvanized tank lasts 20 to 30 years when properly installed and maintained.
Concrete base installation is critical for full lifespan.
Mining requires continuous water supply for processing and dust control.
As a result, large steel tanks prevent costly production shutdowns.