The
United Nations says 1,000 cubic metres are the minimum needed in a
year for an individual in terms of drinking water, food production
and participation in economic activities.
With
a population of about 420 million people, the Arab region is the
world's poorest in terms of water scarcity and percentage of water
per individual - the average percentage share of water for an Arab
individual does not exceed 600 cubic metres per year. Countries like
Jordan, Palestine and Yemen are the poorest, with an average that
does not exceed 200 cubic metres per year.
Remove the Gulf states
from the discussion and water scarcity has a direct impact on the
economy of states such as Jordan, Yemen,
Tunisia and Palestine, which suffer from high rates of poverty. These
countries is their lack financial resources. With money, seawater can
be desalinised and provide water for all kind of economic activities.
The Gulf countries have no water shortages because they have
desalination plants. Even though the cost is too high, it is not an
issue for them as they have cheap energy. But other Arab states
without the same financial muscle and cheap energy cannot afford that
luxury.
The
average annual income of Israeli citizens is almost 10 times of those
in some Arab countries. Israel has strong financial resources and it
also has the technology to build its own desalination plants to
provide water for its population. The strength of the Israeli economy
is directly related to its abundance of water. Jordan is using water
technology that uses water in a smart way and highly effective. For
example, in the Jordan Valley, which is an agricultural region, it
now uses only half of the water it used in 1990 but produces three
times the quantity of agricultural products. This is mainly because
of the introduction of new technologies. According to USAID,
which spends millions on Jordan water projects, 50 percent of water
supplied by the municipality network is lost to leakage and theft.
Jordan has absorbed 1.5 million Syrian refugees since the start of
the Syrian civil war in 2011 which has increased the pressure on our
water resources and infrastructure. Also, the illegal usage of water
is a contributing factor in the country's water scarcity.
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