Transcript Document
Water scarcity
in the Arab
world:
how to get
from ‘crisis’ to
‘sustainable’?
Rania el Masri, Ph.D.
Environment and Energy
Policy Specialist
Cairo, May 8, 2012
[email protected]
2
State of our water
commons
3
Total renewable water resources per capita, 1958-2007
(m3/capita/yr)
Algeria
Bahrain
Djibouti
Egypt
Iraq
Jordan
Kuwait
Lebanon
Libya
Mauritania
Morocco
Oman
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Somalia
Sudan
Syria
Tunisia
UAE
Yemen
12000
10000
8000
6000
4000
2000
0
4
Total renewable water resources per capita
(2008) (m3/capita/yr)
4000
3500
3000
2500
2000
1500
Water scarcity level (< 1000)
1000
Water Crisis level (< 500)
500
0
Absolute water scarcity level (< 165)
5
Total renewable water resources per capita
(2008 and 2016) (m3/capita/yr)
4,000.00
3,500.00
3,000.00
2,500.00
2,000.00
1,500.00
1,000.00
Water scarcity level (< 1000)
Water Crisis level (< 500)
500.00
Absolute water scarcity level (< 165)
-
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20000
18000
Freshwater availability: 1955-2025
(m3/capita/yr)
16000
14000
12000
10000
8000
6000
4000
2000
0
1955
1990
2000
2025
7
Annual per capita water supply; 1960-1999;
projections for 2025
3,500
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
1960
1999
2025
8
Available Renewable Water Resources per capita, 1950 annual per capita water supply (m3/capita/yr)
4500
4000
3500
3000
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 2020 2025 2030 2035 2040 2045 2050
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Population Percent change, 1961-2007
2500
2000
1500
1000
500
0
10
Although fertility rates in the Arab world are declining…
Total fertility in the Arab world: 1970 - 2010
11
Population growth (millions): 1970 - 2025
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1970
2001
2025
12
population growth: 1950-2050
Arab region: among the
fastest population growth
rates (> 2%/year)
GCC population: to
double by 2040
Maghreb population:
to double by 2060
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State of our water commons
Decreasing supply
Aquifers and groundwater already heavily mined
Examples: Yemen, Saudi Arabia; lesser extent: Egypt,
Algeria, Jordan, Lebanon
Increasing demand (decreasing supply per capita)
Population growth
Increasing urbanization, Increasing economic and
social demands
Plus
Projected impacts of climate change
decreasing supply and increasing demand
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Impact of climate change on water availability in Middle East and North Africa in 2050
Source: Milly et al., published in Nature.
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State of our water
commons: leakage
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Water supply and uses
For the Near East as a region, it is estimated that only 30% of
the flood water used in irrigation ever reaches the crop.
(UNDP, HDR2006)
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Unaccounted-for Water (%) (2010)
[water lost via poor infrastructure]
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Source: World Water Intelligence, 2011
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Impacts of our water crisis
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Impact of water crisis: who gets water?
70
60
Population without
access to improved
water sources (2010)
50
40
30
20
10
UAE
Qatar
Lebanon
Kuwait
Egypt
Jordan
Comoros
Tunisia
Syria
Oman
Djibouti
OPT
Morocco
Algeria
Iraq
Sudan
Yemen
Libya
Mauritania
Somalia
0
100
90
Internal differences in
access to improved
water sources (2010)
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Djibouti
Iraq
Morocco Oman
Rural
Somalia
Urban
Sudan
Yemen
20
Impact of water crisis: whose water is clean?
80
70
Population
without access
to improved
sanitation
facilities (2010)
60
50
40
30
20
10
Qatar
Lebanon
Kuwait
Oman
UAE
Jordan
Libya
Syria
Egypt
Algeria
OPT
Tunisia
Iraq
Morocco
Yemen
Djibouti
Comoros
Sudan
Mauritania
Somalia
0
100
90
80
Internal differences
in access to
improved sanitation
facilities (2010)
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Rural
Urban
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(Potential) impacts of decreased
supply and Increased demand
Direct
impacts
… increased cost
… decreased quality (eg: increased
salinization)
Indirect
impacts
… increased poverty
… increased health risks
…risk to livelihoods in agricultural sector
Decreased
ecosystem health
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Responses to our water crisis:
getting to sustainable
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DRIVERS
HUMAN SOCIETY
Population growth
PRESSURES
Increased
consumption
IMPACTS
Increased resource
exploitation
RESPONSES
Climate change
Mitigation and adaptation
Agricultural
mismanagement
State: water security crisis
Decreasing supply
Decreasing quality
ENVIRONMENT
Human well-being:
Economic, Ecosystem
social
services
goods &
Farmer
services
liveilhoods
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Current Responses
Desalination
GCC: more than 50% of domestic water use consumption comes from
desalination
Energy usage: drinking oil?
Negative Impact on marine life
Privatization
UAE, Algeria, Jordan, and Morocco: Public-Private Partnership
Needs strong regulatory government to ensure that public will not suffer from
increased cost and decreased quality
Bottled water consumption (UAE and Lebanon: highest growth in bottled water
consumption in the world)
Some reports indicate by 2050, GCC would spend 50% of their fuel on desalination
Bottled water: polluting industry
Removes pressure on government to provide clean water to population
Reuse of drainage water
Practiced on a large scale in Egypt
Up to 10% of total water resources are from reused from agricultural drainage
water
More limited scale in Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Syria
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Additional necessary responses
Reduce consumption (from repairing infrastructure to family planning)
Develop a water commons
Develop fair pricing – not ‘full cost recovery’ as was in Rio
Reduce vulnerabilities of poor
Charge higher volume users more per unit
Plan for all water resources in a comprehensive package
Participatory stewardship
Why do we assign water quality to a Health Ministry, drinking water to an urban
utility, and irrigation to an Agricultural Ministry, and no one responsible for
watershed health?
Develop sequential water use
Implement wise agricultural management (from halting the export of virtual
water to comprehensive support for small-holder farmers)
Stop export of water-intensive crops such as sugarcane and rice
Support farmers to have the financial means to implement water efficient
irrigation
Ensure water as a human right and not a human need
And of course: work seriously to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions
locally and internationally: make mitigating climate change a priority
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DRIVERS
HUMAN SOCIETY
Population growth
Increased
consumption
PRESSURES
IMPACTS
Increased resource
exploitation
Climate change
Agricultural
mismanagement
RESPONSES
• Reduce consumption
• Develop a water
commons
• Water as a human
right
State: water security crisis
Decreasing supply
Decreasing quality
ENVIRONMENT
Human well-being:
Economic, Ecosystem
social
services
goods &
Farmer
services
liveilhoods
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Water under occupation
and apartheid: Palestine
Theft of Palestinian Water
28
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For more information, please contact Rania el Masri
at [email protected]