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MENA Development Report On Water Making the Most of Scarcity

MENA Development Report On Water Making the Most of Scarcity . MNA Water Seminar June 28, 2007 World Bank Tokyo Satoru Ueda. Syria. Lebanon. Tunisia. Iraq. Morocco. Iran. WBG. Jordan. Libya. Algeria. Bahrain. Egypt. Qatar. Saudi Arabia. UAE. Oman. Yemen. Djibouti.

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MENA Development Report On Water Making the Most of Scarcity

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  1. MENA Development Report On WaterMaking the Most of Scarcity MNA Water Seminar June 28, 2007 World Bank Tokyo Satoru Ueda

  2. Syria Lebanon Tunisia Iraq Morocco Iran WBG Jordan Libya Algeria Bahrain Egypt Qatar Saudi Arabia UAE Oman Yemen Djibouti Lending up to US$100 million Lending over US$100 million Reimbursable Technical Assistance Active MENA Portfolio

  3. Water Supply and Sanitation Water Resources Management Irrigation and Drainage World Bank Lending to the Water Sector in MENA Active Portfolio# • US$1.7 billion • 25 Projects • 9 Countries # FY07 approvals up to March 31, 2007 * Fiscal year 2007 figures are forecasts

  4. How will our actions today change this landscape tomorrow?

  5. Many excellent reports outline strategies for water actors This report shows how non-water sectors must also act Analyses political economic context that might enable reform Why did we do this report?

  6. Outline of presentation

  7. Accelerate the pace of reform….

  8. Overview • Key Sector Issues in MENA • Water Scarcity has been a fact of life in MENA • Management of resources is inefficient • Unclear policies on cost recovery and subsidies • World Bank Water Sector Program in MENA • Future Outlook – Accountability for better water management

  9. Situation is already critical Annual renewable water resources per capita

  10. Deterioration of water quality is already costly

  11. Population Per capita water availability will fall by half by 2050 And growing populations mean scarcity will get worse

  12. And climate change likely to reduce rainfall by at least 20%

  13. MENA countries are spending heavily on water

  14. Not getting full benefits from public investment Command area of dams, compared to area equipped for irrigation

  15. Water infrastructure often not used because of shortages Dams in Morocco are often less than half full

  16. Public funds subsidize services that provide mainly private benefits Operating cost coverage ratio for cities >1mn

  17. Water Access is High, But … Supply is often limited and service is intermittent • Resource allocation policy, i.e., most of the water is allocated to lower value uses (agriculture vs. domestic) • Low levels of cost recovery resulting in lack of funding to adequately manage and operate facilities

  18. In Wastewater … Some facilities operate at levels lower than design capacity or are non-operational • Insufficient level of connections to the wastewater network • Lack of funding for operation and maintenance

  19. Problem well known yet progress has been slow, for many reasons

  20. Societies developed over millennia to deal with scarcity Public institutions led investments in large infrastructure systems Institutions now need to adapt to new realities Yet region has history of adapting to water scarcity

  21. Technological advances reducing price of desalination Private sector investing in irrigation infrastructure User associations to monitor groundwater Users taking control of their irrigation water and infrastructure And promising initiatives emerging across the region

  22. What can be done: 1. Involve non-water sectors

  23. Many factors affect water outcomes Employment opportunities Energy prices Public finance Trade policies

  24. What can be done: 2. Find opportunities in the changing political economy

  25. Desal costs Migration, increased education Potential opportunity as political dynamics may be changing Political Economy Economic Forces Social & Cultural Forces Environmental Forces Institutions Technical Options Interest Groups Policy-Makers Water outcomes

  26. Spotting changes in the political economy and making the most out of them to improve • Cost Recovery • Management and operation of facilities • Putting in place appropriate incentives

  27. Important transformations on the horizon Important to prepare for potential opportunities Harder to reform after new situation is consolidated Opportunity for reform greatest while change is underway

  28. What can be done? 3. Improve accountability to users

  29. Public accountability will be key to turning opportunities into improved water outcomes

  30. Governments and service providers must be accountable to users Provides information necessary for making and enforcing decisions that reflect everyone’s needs Ensures that governments and service providers see consequences of actions Helps improve how well public money is spent Greater accountability helps all aspects of water management

  31. To recap …..

  32. What does this mean for us all? • This is a challenge the region can meet, but action is needed • Water is everyone’s business – all sectors must play their part • Improving accountability to users is a key step to realizing the opportunities presented by changing world

  33. With these changes, water – the essential resource -- can help MENA’s people thrive

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