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Near East and North Africa

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... (irrigation and drinking) save water for ecological reserve and ... Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Syria, The Sudan, Tunisia, Turkey, UAE ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Near East and North Africa


1
Managing
water scarcity
Near East and North Africa
2
Overview
  • Major water challenges in the Near East and
    North Africa (NENA) region
  • The state of water is reaching crisis level.
    (What are the major indicators?)
  • Key responses to address the water challenges
  • Major water policy reforms needed
  • Water-saving technologies in irrigated
    agriculture
  • Water-saving technologies in rainfed agriculture
  • IFADs engagement in addressing water scarcity
    in NENA
  • Key points for discussion

3
  • Major Water Challenges
  • in the NENA Region

4
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • NENA is the driest region in the world, with
    increasing drought frequency and severity.
  • With 5 of the worlds population, the region is
    endowed with only 1 of the worlds accessible
    freshwater.
  • Available surface water is limited and threatened
    by increasing soil erosion.
  • Groundwater is being pumped in excess of natural
    recharge rates.

5
(No Transcript)
6
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • Projected water availability is lower than in
    other water-scarce regions

Cubic metre/per capita/per year
7
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • Freshwater availability is falling to crisis
    levels

Cubic metre/per capita/per year
8
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • Stress related to water quality and quantity is
    severe


H I G H Algeria Egypt Iraq Lebanon Morocco Syria Tunisia Jordan West Bank and Gaza Yemen
L O W Bahrain Kuwait Oman Qatar Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates
LOW H I G H
Water Quality Severity
Water Quantity Severity
9
State of Water in the NENA Region
Water Sector Uses
10
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • Many people still lack access to safe water
  • Population with Water Coverage ('000)

Total population without coverage 22.6 million
11
State of Water in the NENA Region
  • In irrigation, cost recovery is low
  • Irrigation Operation and Maintenance (OM)
  • Cost Recovery Ratio
  • Ratios gt1 indicate user repayment not only for
    OM but also
  • for capital and replacement costs.

12
  • Key Responses to Address
  • the Water Challenges

13
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Adopt an integrated approach to water resource
    management in service delivery
  • Consider water as a holistic resource with
    competing demands.
  • Promote service delivery on the basis of water
    users demand and their repayment capacity.
  • Support private and public water service
    providers that create economic incentives for
    sustainable water use.

14
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Raise water tariffs, without excluding targeted
    subsidies to the poorest. This is critical to
  • promote savings of water use by increasing
    tariffs
  • set water charges to cover all water
    infrastructure maintenance costs
  • ensure financial sustainability of water service
    providers (irrigation and drinking)
  • save water for ecological reserve and
    environmental purposes

15
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Promote policy reforms to encourage farmers to
    shift to irrigated crops, which provide higher
    value per unit of water
  • Priority should be given to crops requiring less
    water.
  • With globalization, the virtual water concept
    becomes an important factor in agricultural
    trade.
  • In NENA, given scarcity of water, promotion of
    export crop production should not be based on
    foreign currency needs but driven by the
    implications for the sustainability of water
    resources.

16
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Adopt a sustainable groundwater use strategy
  • An underground water control by-law should be
    issued and enforced to regulate the use of
    groundwater resources based on the following
    principles
  • Underground water is owned and controlled by the
    State, and ownership of land does not include
    ownership of groundwater.
  • Extraction and use of underground water is
    authorized by a license to the landowner.
  • The 2002 Jordanian Underground Water Control
    By-Law is a good example.

17
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Decentralize water management responsibility
  • The management of water distribution networks
    (except primary canals) should be decentralized
    and turned over to farmers.
  • Decentralization should include poor farmers as
    members of water users associations.
  • Changes in behavioural and social patterns need
    to be fostered to conserve water (public
    awareness).

18
Major Water Policy Reforms Needed
  • Promote cooperation for sustainable management of
    transboundary water resources
  • Shared ground and surface water resources need to
    be jointly assessed and monitored (in terms of
    quantity and quality).
  • Concerted action plans should be adopted for
    sustainable use of shared water resources.
  • The ongoing experience of Algeria, the Libyan
    Arab Jamahiriya and Tunisia (IFAD-supported
    programme implemented by the Sahara and Sahelian
    Observatory SSO) is a possible model.

19
Water-Saving Technologies in Irrigated
Agriculture
  • Use treated waste water for irrigation (Jordan).
  • Increase adoption of new precision irrigation and
    drainage systems.
  • Promote low-cost water-harvesting technologies
    (Jordan, Tunisia).
  • Adopt conservation tillage and planting on raised
    beds to use irrigation water more efficiently.
  • Exploit available technologies for saline water
    use (recent International Center for Biosaline
    Agriculture ICBA results).

20
Water-Saving Technologies in Rainfed Agriculture
  • Improved small-scale and supplemental irrigation
    systems can increase productivity of rainfed
    agriculture.
  • More efficient crop sequencing and timely
    planting can achieve significant savings in water
    use.
  • New crop varieties, requiring less water, are
    being developed by research institutions, and
    some are already available.

21
IFADs Engagement in Addressing Water Scarcity
in NENA
  • Promoting sustainable water use and access to
    water by the rural poor is an IFAD regional
    strategic objective
  • IFAD loans targeting small-scale irrigation,
    rainfed farming and rural potable water supply
    schemes are
  • promoting the latest available technologies for
    improving water-use efficiency
  • involving the rural poor in water governance
    through grass-roots water users associations

22
IFADs Engagement in Addressing Water Scarcity
in NENA
  • IFAD regional grants aim at generating and
    testing new approaches in the sustainable water
    management. Examples are
  • action research on participatory irrigation
    management programme (International Centre for
    Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies
    CIHEAM)
  • use of brackish and saline water (Arab Center for
    the Studies of Arid Zones and Drylands ACSAD
    and ICBA)
  • On farm water harvesting (ICARDA)
  • facilitating of collaboration on transboundary
    water (SSO)
  • capacity-building for management of water demand
    (International Development Research Centre IDRC)

23
Key Points for Discussion
  • What are the most critical policy measures needed
    to enhance water-use efficiency at the farm
    level?
  • To what extent can water prices be increased to
    fully cover OM costs?
  • How can pro-poor and participatory water
    governance in irrigation and potable water supply
    be promoted in rural areas?
  • How can cooperation be enhanced in managing
    transboundary water resources?
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