General summary Near East Region
Water withdrawal
Table 4 shows the distribution of water withdrawal by region between the
three major sectors of water use: agriculture (irrigation and livestock), communities
(domestic water supply) and
industries. Water requirements for navigation, fisheries, mining,
environment and recreation, although they may represent a significant part of the water
resources, have a very low net consumption rate and are computed in very different ways by
the different countries. For these reasons, they are not included in the computation of
regional water withdrawal.
TABLE 4 - Sub-regional distribution of water withdrawal
| Region |
Water withdrawal by
sector |
% by region (1993) |
m³/year per
inhabitant |
| agricultural |
domestic |
industrial |
total |
| km³ per year |
% of total |
km³ per year |
% of total |
km³ per year |
% of total |
km³ per year |
| Maghreb |
21.1 |
85 |
2.5 |
10 |
1.2 |
5 |
24.8 |
4.8 |
363 |
| North-eastern Africa |
65.0 |
88 |
3.9 |
5 |
4.8 |
7 |
73.7 |
14.4 |
764 |
| Arabian Peninsula |
21.2 |
87 |
2.6 |
11 |
0.5 |
2 |
24.3 |
4.8 |
659 |
| Middle East |
77.7 |
85 |
7.7 |
8 |
6.0 |
7 |
91.4 |
17.8 |
907 |
| Central Asia |
282.9 |
95 |
8.3 |
3 |
7.0 |
2 |
298.2 |
58.2 |
1 302 |
| Total Near East |
467.9 |
91 |
25.0 |
5 |
19.5 |
4 |
512.4 |
100.0 |
964 |
| World 1990 |
2 235.6 |
69 |
259.2 |
8 |
745.2 |
23 |
3 240.0 |
|
660 |
| N East as % of world |
20.9 |
|
9.6 |
|
2.6 |
|
15.8 |
|
146 |
In the Near East, 91% of the water withdrawal is directed towards
agriculture. Central Asia has the highest level of water withdrawal for agriculture (95%).
This is the sub-region where the largest part of the cultivated area (80%) is irrigated,
as compared to 16% in the Maghreb (Table 8). Afghanistan is the country with the largest
percentage of water withdrawal directed to agriculture (99%), Malta, with 12%, is the
country with the lowest percentage. In Malta by far the largest part of the
total water withdrawal, over 87%, is directed to the communities, due to the extremely
high population density (1 158 inhabitants/km²) and the extensive development of tourism
in the country, among other reasons. In absolute terms, Central Asia represents over 58%
of the total water withdrawal for the Near East, Pakistan alone withdrawing 30%. The water
withdrawal per inhabitant varies from 20 m³/year in Djibouti (1985) to over 6 000
m³/year in Turkmenistan (1989). At sub-regional level, the water withdrawal per
inhabitant in Central Asia (1300 m³/year) is on average 3.6 times the water withdrawal
per inhabitant in the Maghreb (360 m/year; Table 4).
Use of non-conventional sources of water
Water withdrawal, expressed as a percentage of internal renewable water
resources is an indicator of the sub-region's or country's capacity to rely on its own,
renewable, sources of water. Values above 100% indicate that either renewable water
flowing into the subregion or country from outside, or fossil, or nonconventional sources
of water are used in addition to the internal renewable water resources (Figure 6). In North-eastern Africa, where the percentage is 171% (Table 5), water transfer
plays a crucial role (the Nile flows into the region from upstream countries outside the
region), while in the Arabian Peninsula, with a percentage of 317%, the deficit is mainly
made good by the use of fossil and non-conventional sources of water.
TABLE 5 - Sub-regional water withdrawal as % of IRWR
| Region |
Water withdrawal |
| total km³/year |
as % of IRWR |
| Maghreb |
24.8 |
51 |
| North-eastern Africa |
73.7 |
171 |
| Arabian Peninsula |
24.3 |
317 |
| Middle East |
91.4 |
37 |
| Central Asia |
298.2 |
55 |
| Total |
512.4 |
58 |
Water withdrawal, expressed as a percentage of actual renewable water
resources is a good indicator of the pressure on the renewable water resources. Roughly,
it can be considered that pressure on water resources is high when this value is above
25%. In the Near East, only five countries are below the 25% limit (Figure 7). Values above 100% indicate that the country relies at least partly on
non-conventional water sources (desalinated water, treated wastewater) or is mining its
groundwater resources. In 14 countries, annual water withdrawal is greater than the
internal renewable water resources (Figure 6), but five countries benefit from rivers
flowing in from upstream countries, resulting in an annual water withdrawal that is lower
than the actual renewable water resources (Table 6). This is the case for Egypt (the Nile
river), Turkmenistan (the Amu Darya), Mauritania (the Senegal river), Syria and Iraq (the
Euphrates and Tigris rivers). The remaining nine countries are those of the Arabian
Peninsula (except Yemen), Libya, Jordan and Malta. In these countries, water withdrawal is
greater than the total actual renewable water resources and they have to rely on
non-conventional water sources and on fossil water to satisfy water demand.
TABLE 6 - Countries with total water withdrawal greater than the
internal renewable water resources and contribution of other sources of water to total
water withdrawal
| Country |
Water withdrawal |
Use of
non-conventional water and groundwater depletion as % of total water withdrawal |
| in % of IRWR |
in % of ARWR |
non- conventional |
groundwater
depletion |
total |
| Countries with water withdrawal
above IRWR, but below ARWR: |
| Egypt |
3 061 |
95 |
0.4 |
2.5 |
2.9 |
| Turkmenistan |
2 280 |
32 |
- |
- |
- |
| Mauritania |
408 |
14 |
0.1 |
- |
- |
| Syria |
206 |
55 |
2.6 |
12.6 |
15.2 |
| Iraq |
122 |
57 |
- |
- |
- |
| Countries with water withdrawal
above IRWR and above ARWR: |
| Kuwait |
IRWR negligible |
2 690 |
52.6 |
46.5 * |
91.1 |
| Bahrain |
5 981 |
206 |
21.8 |
40.2 |
62.0 |
| United Arab Emirates |
1 405 |
1405 |
23.4 |
70.9 |
94.3 |
| Libya |
767 |
767 |
3.7 |
90.0 * |
93.7 |
| Saudi Arabia |
709 |
709 |
5.5 |
79.7 |
85.2 |
| Qatar |
559 |
538 |
43.5 |
14.9 |
58.4 |
| Malta |
359 |
359 |
59.2 |
32.2 |
91.4 |
| Jordan |
145 |
112 |
5.3 |
17.5 |
22.8 |
* Figures have been estimated
Pakistan, Iran, Sudan and Afghanistan have high rates of use of their internal renewable water resources (between 48 and 63%), but benefit from important internal resources as well as from incoming water. Tunisia and Yemen also use most of their internal renewable water resources (87 and 72% respectively), but they cannot benefit from important internal resources or incoming water. It is likely
that these two countries will have to rely increasingly on alternative sources of water in
the future.
TABLE 7 - Countries using the largest quantities of desalinated water
and treated wastewater
| Country |
Use of non
conventional sources of water |
desalinated water
106 m³/yr |
as % of total
withdr. |
as % of withdrawal
of country |
treated wastewater
106 m³/yr |
as % of total
withdr. |
as % of withdrawal
of country |
total non-
conventional 106 m³/yr |
as % of total
withdr. |
as % of withdrawal
of country |
| Saudi Arabia |
714 |
41.3 |
4.20 |
217 |
18.1 |
1.28 |
931 |
31.8 |
5.48 |
| United Arab Emirates |
385 |
22.3 |
18.26 |
108 |
9.0 |
5.12 |
493 |
16.8 |
23.38 |
| Kuwait |
231 |
13.4 |
42.94 |
52 |
4.3 |
9.67 |
283 |
9.7 |
52.61 |
| Syria |
- |
- |
- |
370 |
30.8 |
2.57 |
370 |
12.6 |
2.57 |
| Egypt |
25 |
1.5 |
0.05 |
200 |
16.7 |
0.36 |
225 |
7.7 |
0.41 |
| Other 24 countries |
372 |
21.5 |
0.09 |
253 |
21.1 |
0.06 |
625 |
21.4 |
0.15 |
| Total Near East |
727 |
100.0 |
0.34 |
1 200 |
100.0 |
0.23 |
2 927 |
100.0 |
0.57 |
The total use of desalinated water in the Near East is estimated at 1727
million m³/year. In absolute terms, three countries, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates and Kuwait, are by far the largest users of desalinated water with 77% of the
total for the region, with Saudi Arabia alone accounting for 41% (Table 7).
The total quantity of reused treated wastewater in the Near East is
estimated at 1200 million m³/year. Syria, Saudi Arabia and Egypt are the largest users of
treated wastewater in absolute terms, accounting for almost 66% of all the wastewater
reused in the region, with Syria alone accounting for almost 31%.
Considering the use of both desalinated water and treated wastewater,
the above five countries account for almost 80% of the total for the Near East (Table 7).
The Arabian Peninsula is the sub-region using the largest quantity of
desalinated water and treated wastewater: 1 953 million m³/year or almost 67% of the
total in the Near East Region. It is also the sub-region where the contribution of
non-conventional sources of water to total water withdrawal is greatest (8%). Central Asia
uses the smallest quantity of desalinated water and treated wastewater: 12 million
m³/year or only 0.4% of the total in the Near East Region. The contribution of
non-conventional sources of water to water withdrawal is also lowest in this sub-region
(0.004%). In two countries (Malta and Kuwait), the contribution of non-conventional
sources of water to total water withdrawal is over 50%. In three countries (Qatar, the
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain) it is between 20 and 50% (Figure 8). For
the remaining countries it is less than 10%.
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