

African Tanks supplies durable galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks to buyers across Senegal. Tanks suit household, agricultural, commercial, and community use – from Dakar’s densely populated urban districts to remote Sahelian villages in the Ferlo region. Contact African Tanks directly for sizing, pricing, and delivery to your site in Senegal.
African Tanks supplies galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks in Senegal for households, farms, NGO water points, and commercial operations. Tanks range from 30,000 to 500,000 litres and beyond, with custom sizing available. With 25 percent of Senegal’s population lacking basic water access and aid agencies reporting homes cut off for months at a time, a properly sized steel tank is the most reliable water security investment available to buyers across the country.
Water storage refers to storing potable (safe drinking water) and non-potable water for future use.
Across Senegal, many communities face water shortages due to drought, infrastructure limitations, and inconsistent supply. Stored water allows households, farms, and businesses to maintain operations when supply fails.
In addition, water storage reduces costs, supports emergency use, and improves water security.
With changing rainfall patterns and rising SONES water costs, storage is now essential nationwide.
Senegal’s water crisis affects both urban and rural areas and continues to intensify in 2026.
In Dakar, a city of over 3.5 million people, residents in outer districts and informal settlements experience supply cuts lasting days or even weeks. As a result, households rely on wells or expensive tanker deliveries.
Beyond the capital, regions such as Casamance, Kolda, and Tambacounda depend on seasonal rainfall and ageing borehole systems. However, declining groundwater levels are increasing system failure rates.
Agriculture contributes over 15 percent of GDP and employs approximately 70 percent of the rural workforce. Crops such as peanuts, millet, rice, and vegetables rely on stored water during the long dry season from November to May.
Therefore, demand for bulk steel water storage tanks continues to grow across farming, NGO, municipal, and commercial sectors.
As a result, water storage is no longer backup infrastructure. It is essential infrastructure across Senegal.
el tank is now essential infrastructure – not optional backup – for buyers across Senegal in 2026.
Galvanized steel tanks are the most reliable solution for Senegal’s Sahelian climate.
Temperatures frequently exceed 40°C in Dakar and the Senegal River basin, while Harmattan dust causes abrasion that degrades plastic tanks over time.
The zinc coating on galvanized tanks resists both heat and dust damage. In addition, steel maintains structural integrity during temperature fluctuations between cool nights and extreme daytime heat.
As a result, buyers in regions such as Ferlo, Louga, and Saint-Louis consistently choose galvanized steel tanks for their 20–30 year lifespan.
Water tanks serve buyers across Senegal in ways that go well beyond household convenience. Peanut farmers in the Sine-Saloum basin, market gardeners in the Niayes coastal strip, NGO water point operators in Tambacounda, and urban households in Dakar’s Parcelles Assainies district all depend on bulk storage to maintain reliable water access. Common uses include:
Senegal faces a water shortage crisis. Some 25 percent of Senegal’s population lacks basic access to water, but some fear the government’s solution could make matters worse. Along with an increasing number of countries around the world, Senegal is trying to handle a shortage of potable water.
Aid agencies say a quarter of Senegal’s population lacks basic water access, with some homes completely cut off for months. Residents in Dakar describe the daily reality:
“This is becoming extremely difficult. I’m obliged to walk a very long distance seeking water. This is difficult, very difficult.” – Dakar resident
“Every day I go to line up near a well to get water and I’m not allowed to have more than three barrels because other people also must have.” – Dakar mother
African Tanks provides portable water storage solutions ideal for areas in Senegal with known water shortages.
Emergency water storage – such as rainwater collection and rainwater harvesting tanks – supports rural communities, livestock operations, and farming settlements across the country.
In rural areas and small farming communities, stored rainwater helps break down compost, keep livestock hydrated, and maintain harvests through Senegal’s long dry season.
Stored rainwater also suits rinsing fruits and vegetables straight from a garden or plantation across the Casamance and Senegal River valley regions.
Water storage tanks allow farmers to store water after the rainy season and use it during dry months.
For example, a 50,000-litre tank can irrigate a small market garden for up to 30 days. Larger farms in the Senegal River valley often require 250,000 litres or more.
As a result, stored water ensures crop survival and protects agricultural income.
African Tanks manufactures four main tank types for buyers in Senegal. Each suits different volume requirements, site conditions, and budget profiles. Galvanized tanks cover most household and smallholder farm applications, while bolted and sectional systems serve larger infrastructure projects, NGO water points, and commercial operations.
Steel tanks from African Tanks handle the largest bulk water storage requirements across Senegal. Dakar’s port and industrial zone, food processing facilities in Kaolack, and large irrigation reservoirs in the Senegal River valley all specify steel tanks for their structural strength and high-volume capacity.
Tanks start at 50,000 litres and scale to several million litres.
For any buyer in Senegal that needs serious volume for industrial or large agricultural applications, steel is the foundation choice.
Galvanized tanks are the most popular choice for Senegalese households, schools, clinics, smallholder farms, and mid-size commercial operations.
The zinc coating resists corrosion in Senegal’s coastal humidity around Dakar and Saint-Louis, as well as the abrasive Harmattan dust that arrives from the Sahara between November and March.
In addition, galvanized steel outlasts plastic by 20 to 30 years under Senegal’s intense UV and heat – making it the most cost-effective long-term choice for buyers across the country.
Tanks range from 10,000 to 1,000,000 litres. Beyond corrosion resistance, the hygienic internal lining makes galvanized tanks suitable for potable drinking water storage throughout the year.
Bolted tanks give NGOs, municipalities, and agricultural buyers in Senegal’s remote interior the ability to install large-capacity storage without road access for heavy equipment.
African Tanks ships bolted tank components as flat panels that teams can transport by light 4×4 vehicle to remote Ferlo or Casamance sites, then assemble on location with standard hand tools.
That modular approach makes bolted tanks the standard specification for UNICEF, World Vision, and other NGOs operating community water points across Senegal’s rural south and east.
Capacities start at 100,000 litres and scale well beyond 1,000,000 litres for larger infrastructure deployments.
Sectional tanks suit Senegal’s urban commercial segment – office buildings and apartment blocks in Dakar’s Plateau and Almadies districts, hotels along the Petite Cote, and commercial facilities where installation access is restricted.
Panels arrive on site and bolt together within existing building footprints, making sectional tanks the preferred choice for urban property developers and businesses that need 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 Senegal |
| Steel tanks | 50,000 – 5,000,000+ L | Industrial sites, large irrigation reservoirs, Dakar port facilities | High-volume structural strength for Senegal’s agricultural and industrial water demand |
| Galvanized tanks | 10,000 – 1,000,000 L | Households, schools, clinics, smallholder farms, NGO water points | Corrosion-resistant against coastal humidity, Harmattan dust, and Sahelian UV |
| Bolted tanks | 100,000 – 10,000,000+ L | Remote Ferlo and Casamance sites, NGO water points, community supply | Flat-pack panels reach sites where roads end – hand-carry delivery possible |
| Sectional tanks | 10,000 – 500,000 L | Dakar urban buildings, hotels, Petite Cote resorts, commercial sites | Space-efficient where Dakar’s dense urban footprint restricts installation access |
A Senegalese household of four to six people needs at minimum a 10,000-litre tank to buffer supply cuts of up to a week in Dakar’s outer districts.
Families in areas like Pikine, Guediawaye, and Rufisque – where cuts can stretch to two weeks or more – should target 20,000 to 30,000 litres.
Rural households in the Casamance or Ferlo that rely entirely on rainwater harvesting or a seasonal borehole should spec 50,000 litres or above to cover the seven-month dry season from November to May.
Contact African Tanks for a sizing consultation based on your household size, location, and water source.
Senegal’s water storage demand spans sectors from urban households and peanut farming to NGO programmes, industrial processing, and coastal tourism. The table below helps buyers identify the right capacity range for their specific application.
| Sector | Typical Capacity Needed | Why Storage is Critical Here |
| Residential / household | 10,000 – 50,000 L | SONES supply cuts in Dakar outer districts leave families without water for days to weeks |
| Smallholder and peanut farming | 50,000 – 500,000 L | Sine-Saloum and Casamance farmers need dry season irrigation reserve from November to May |
| Cash crop and horticulture | 100,000 – 1,000,000 L | Niayes market gardens and Senegal River valley rice and vegetable farms need reliable irrigation |
| Municipal / community supply | 50,000 – 1,000,000+ L | Remote villages in Tambacounda, Kolda, and Kedougou lack borehole or utility coverage |
| NGO and humanitarian programmes | 50,000 – 500,000 L | WASH organisations deploy bolted steel tanks at community water points across rural Senegal |
| Hospitality / tourism | 10,000 – 250,000 L | Hotels and resorts along the Petite Cote and in Cap Skirring need dry season backup supply |
| Industrial / commercial | 100,000 – 2,000,000+ L | Dakar’s food processing, groundnut oil refining, and port logistics sectors need bulk water reserve |
| Construction / remote sites | 5,000 – 500,000 L | Infrastructure projects in Senegal’s east and south need on-site potable and process water |
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 Senegal’s household, agricultural, and NGO buyers require.
| Benefit | What It Means for Buyers in Senegal |
| Warranty protection | Every tank carries written warranty cover – important for remote Senegalese sites in the Ferlo, Casamance, or Kedougou far from supplier support |
| Galvanized steel construction | Zinc coating resists Senegal’s coastal humidity, Harmattan dust, and intense Sahelian UV across the dry season |
| Hygienic potable storage | Food-grade internal coatings keep drinking water safe through Senegal’s peak dry season temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius |
| Modular panel design | Flat-pack bolted tank components reach remote villages by light vehicle or hand-carry where paved roads end |
| Custom capacities | Tanks scale from household backup in Dakar to bulk irrigation reservoirs and community supply tanks in rural Senegal |
| Affordable long-term solution | Steel outlasts plastic by 20 to 30 years under Sahelian conditions – lower total cost across the full working life |
| After-sales support | African Tanks provides installation guidance and remote technical support from delivery through to commissioning |
African Tanks offers the following standard capacity range for Senegal buyers, with custom sizes available on request:
Tank designs available in galvanized and steel construction:
Contact African Tanks for capacities beyond 500,000 litres, including bolted tank systems scaling to several million litres for large agricultural, municipal, or NGO programme applications.
Water tanks can be customized to suit your specific needs and connected to various types of water collection systems across Senegal. African Tanks designs and supplies custom storage for the following sectors:
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 from Senegal’s coastal humidity and Harmattan conditions without affecting internal water quality.
For buyers in rural Senegal where water quality monitoring infrastructure is limited – particularly in the Casamance and Kolda regions – using a certified potable-grade steel tank removes a significant health risk compared to unlined plastic or bare concrete cisterns.
Rainwater harvesting is the accumulation and storage of rainwater for reuse. In Senegal, the rainy season runs from June to October in the north and June to November in the Casamance region in the south – concentrating the country’s annual rainfall into a five-month window.
Capturing that rainfall in a galvanized or bolted steel tank lets households, farms, and communities use it through the seven-month dry season that follows.
African Tanks water storage systems offer a cost-effective way to save water at a fraction of the cost of tanker resupply or borehole deepening.
This is an affordable, warranty-protected solution for either long or short term water storage. In rural areas of the Casamance, Sine-Saloum delta, and Ferlo, stored rainwater supports composting, keeps livestock hydrated, and maintains crop irrigation through the dry season.
Stored rainwater also suits rinsing fruits and vegetables straight from a garden or plantation.
Choosing the right tank size in Senegal starts with understanding your water source and dry-season exposure.
Households in Dakar’s outer districts, including Pikine, Guediawaye, and the Banlieue, that rely on SONES mains supply but experience regular cuts should plan for 10,000 to 20,000 litres to cover roughly one week of use.
Households dependent on tanker delivery or seasonal boreholes should size up to 30,000 to 50,000 litres to carry supply through the November to May dry season without repeated delivery costs.
Smallholder farmers in Sine-Saloum and Casamance must size tanks based on irrigated area and crop type. A one-hectare market garden under drip irrigation typically requires 50,000 to 150,000 litres to maintain production through the dry season.
Peanut and millet farmers using overhead or furrow irrigation often need 250,000 litres or more for holdings of two hectares or larger. In all cases, oversizing by 20 percent is more cost-effective than installing additional storage later.
NGOs and municipalities should calculate capacity based on population, daily demand, and refill intervals. A borehole-fed system serving 500 people at 20 litres per person per day requires at least 50,000 litres to provide a five-day buffer.
However, WASH programmes in regions such as Kolda and Kedougou typically specify 100,000 to 250,000 litres for multi-village supply points.
Contact African Tanks for a free sizing consultation. Specialists assess your water source, location, sector, and seasonal demand before recommending the correct capacity.
African Tanks manufactures all tanks in South Africa and ships them to Senegal as complete units or flat-packed modular panels, depending on tank type and site conditions.
Complete galvanized tanks ship in standard containers through the Port of Dakar and arrive ready for installation on a prepared concrete base. In contrast, bolted and sectional tanks pack flat, reducing freight volume and lowering landed costs for buyers delivering to Saint-Louis, Ziguinchor, Tambacounda, and other regions.
For remote sites in Ferlo, Casamance, and Kedougou, modular tank components are transferred from container freight to light vehicles or motorcycles for last-mile delivery. Where road access ends, crews carry panels manually to the installation site.
African Tanks provides step-by-step installation guidance and remote technical support throughout the process, from site preparation and base construction to first fill and commissioning. In addition, after-sales support continues to assist with any operational or maintenance queries.
| Consideration | What to Think About |
| Daily water demand | Size for peak-use days – SONES cuts in Dakar can last two weeks or more in outer districts |
| Water source type | SONES mains, borehole, rainwater harvesting, or tanker delivery – each source affects sizing and tank spec |
| Dry season duration | Senegal’s dry season runs November to May in the north and November to June in the Casamance – plan storage to cover the full period |
| Potable vs non-potable use | Potable drinking water requires certified internal coatings – confirm this at enquiry stage with African Tanks |
| Location and access | Remote Ferlo and Casamance sites need flat-pack bolted systems; Dakar urban sites suit compact sectional designs |
| Harmattan dust exposure | Galvanized steel resists abrasive Harmattan dust that degrades plastic tank surfaces in northern and central Senegal |
| Expansion plans | Oversizing by 20% now costs less than installing a second tank later – factor future household or farm growth into the initial spec |
| NGO procurement standards | UNICEF, UNHCR, and World Vision water point specifications typically require bolted steel tanks with certified potable liners |
| Freight and logistics | Factor Port of Dakar landing costs and inland transport to your site when comparing total landed price quotes |
African Tanks serves buyers across Senegal with galvanized and bolted steel water storage tanks suited to household, agricultural, NGO, and commercial use. Whether your site is a family compound in Dakar’s Banlieue, a peanut farm in the Sine-Saloum, a community water point in Tambacounda, or a hotel along the Petite Cote, the team can size and quote a solution for your needs.
You can buy water storage tanks in Senegal from African Tanks, delivered via the Port of Dakar.
Tanks are shipped from South Africa and transported inland to Tambacounda, Saint-Louis, Ziguinchor, and Kedougou. Capacities range from 10,000 to 500,000+ litres for households, farms, and NGOs.
Water tank prices in Senegal depend on size, type, and delivery distance.
Household systems start from 10,000 litres, while farm and NGO systems range from 50,000 to 500,000+ litres. Steel tanks last 20–30 years, lowering lifetime cost.
Farm sizing in Senegal depends on crop type, irrigated area, and dry season length. A one-hectare market garden under drip irrigation needs 50,000 to 150,000 litres to maintain production through the November to May dry season. L
arger peanut and millet operations on two or more hectares should spec 250,000 litres or more.
Farms in the Senegal River valley or Casamance that also water livestock should add at least 10,000 to 20,000 litres per 50 head of cattle to their base irrigation calculation.
Yes – African Tanks applies food-grade internal coatings and certified potable-grade liners to tanks specified for drinking water storage.
The external zinc galvanizing protects against corrosion without affecting internal water quality.
Buyers should confirm the potable-use specification at enquiry stage to ensure the correct internal coating ships with the tank. This is especially important for rural communities in Senegal where water quality monitoring is limited.
A galvanized steel tank from African Tanks lasts 20 to 30 years under typical Senegalese condition.
That lifespan is three to four times longer than a comparable plastic tank in the same environment.
Correct installation on a prepared concrete base, away from standing water and soil contact, combined with annual inspection of seals and fittings, consistently extends tank life toward the upper end of that range.
A galvanized tank is a single welded steel unit with a zinc coating for corrosion protection. It suits residential, farm, and commercial buyers with standard site access and capacities up to about 1,000,000 litres.
A bolted tank ships as flat panels that crews assemble on site – making it ideal for remote locations, large capacities beyond 500,000 litres, and areas of Senegal where transporting a complete welded tank is impractical.
In Senegal, galvanized tanks dominate household and smallholder applications while bolted systems serve NGO water points and large agricultural projects.
Yes – African Tanks designs its bolted tank systems specifically for remote site delivery. Flat-panel components pack into standard freight containers for port delivery to Dakar, then transfer to lighter vehicles for inland transport to Tambacounda, Kolda, Kedougou, or the Casamance.
Where road access ends, crews hand-carry panels to the final installation point. African Tanks provides logistics guidance and after-sales support for remote Senegalese sites on request.
African Tanks offers rectangular, circular, square, elevated, and fully custom configurations in galvanized and steel construction.
Bolted and sectional systems come in modular panel formats that adapt to almost any site footprint.
Buyers can specify custom shapes, heights, and capacity configurations to match their specific site and use case in Senegal. Contact African Tanks to discuss design options for your project.
Yes – every tank carries written warranty protection covering manufacturing defects in materials and construction. For buyers in Senegal’s remote south and east, where logistics costs make replacements expensive, that written warranty provides important assurance.
Yes – African Tanks designs tanks that connect to roof guttering, surface catchment channels, and existing rainwater collection infrastructure.
In Senegal, where the rainy season concentrates annual rainfall into five months from June to October, a properly connected galvanized or bolted steel tank captures and stores wet-season rainfall for use through the long dry season.
Buyers in the Casamance and Sine-Saloum can collect and store enough rainfall during the wet season to supply household and small farm needs through to the following June.
Major industrial users of bulk water storage in Senegal include groundnut oil processing in Kaolack and Ziguinchor, fishing and seafood processing along the Petite Cote and in Dakar, phosphate mining in Thies, construction across the country, and food and beverage manufacturing in Dakar’s industrial zone.
Hotels and resorts along the coast also specify bulk storage tanks to guarantee guest water supply through the peak tourist season from November to April – exactly the period when utility supply is most constrained.
Water storage is essential in Senegal in 2026 due to widespread supply shortages and climate pressure.
Around 25% of the population lacks reliable access, while Dakar and rural regions experience extended outages. As a result, on-site tanks are now critical for household, agricultural, and community water security.
A household needs 20,000–30,000 litres for short-term backup and 50,000 litres or more for full dry-season coverage.
The dry season runs from November to May, and rural households without reliable supply must size for several months without resupply.
Yes, steel tanks are significantly better than plastic for long-term use in Senegal.
Steel lasts 20–30 years and resists heat, UV, and Harmattan dust, while plastic typically fails within 5–10 years under the same conditions.
A galvanized water tank lasts 20 to 30 years in Senegal.
The zinc coating protects against coastal humidity, dust abrasion, and high temperatures, especially when installed on a proper concrete base.
Water tanks provide reliable storage for community water points and WASH systems.
For example, a 100,000-litre tank can supply 500 people for about 10 days at 20 litres per person per day, helping prevent shortages during supply disruptions.