Thirsty crops, leaky infrastructure drive Tunisia water crisis
If pushed to sacrifice showering, cooking, drinking or raising his chickens, Tunisian farmer Saeed Barhoumi said he would first forgo showering. It is a decision that he and his family frequently face. The closest source of clean water is a collective tap that is a 4-km walk away from their isolated home on an arid plain in the northern region of Kairouan.
No pipes or roads run to their house and they are not serviced by the volunteer-run collectives, known as Agricultural Development Groups (GDA), who are tasked with bringing water from wells to more than half the region’s inhabitants. “We used to grow much more wheat, we used to plant tomatoes, but we don’t have (enough) water,” said Barhoumi, overlooking the dusty hills stretching out in front of his doorstep.
Poor planning, sparse water resources and the worsening impacts of climate change have combined to create a crippling water crisis in Tunisia, say civil society groups. In 2018 more than 94 percent of Tunisians had access to water, either through the national supplier or the GDA, according to official figures. But Alaa Marzougui, coordinator at the non-governmental organization Nomad08 for socio-economic and cultural rights, estimates the real number is significantly lower.
Due to random cuts to water supplies, debt and management issues with the GDAs and the poor quality of water that runs from the taps, Marzougui said about three-quarters of the population have problems accessing clean water. Data from the ministry of agriculture shows the total amount of water available in the country can provide 420 cubic metres per person per year, making it a “very water scarce country”, by UN Water standards.
The country’s irregular rainfall patterns are accentuated by climate change, with periods of droughts and record high temperatures oscillating between torrential rain and floods, according to the agriculture ministry. The latest government figures also reveal that poor infrastructure means in some regions about half of water is lost before it even reaches the tap. “We monopolize more than 90 percent of our water - what we have we are already using,” said Imen Louati, research officer at the non-governmental Tunisian Economic Observatory (OTE).
Arid living
In Kairouan, water drains a quarter of the Barhoumi family’s monthly budget. Eleven plastic cylinders of varying heights sit in their courtyard, storing water for use by 11 people, as well as a small wheat crop and some chickens. It is mostly women who carry the burden of fetching water, said Minyara Mejbri, regional coordinator of the Tunisian Forum for Economic and Social Rights in Kairouan. “They might spend the whole day working in the field, then prepare dinner, then take the container to the communal tap, where they often have to queue for one hour,” she said.
In 2015, Barhoumi’s nine-year-old daughter Ahlem killed herself, a tragedy that the family puts down to the remoteness of their home and the lack of resources, including water. “She dreamt of another life, to live near her school,” said her grandmother, Massouda, who had walked with Ahlem to collect 20 litres of rainwater that day. “Here, she has no shower, no friends, all her dreams are elsewhere.” Cuts and leaks
Even for houses on the grid, water is not guaranteed. Nomad08 recorded 3,000 cuts between 2016 and 2018 across the country, lasting up to 60 days at a time. During the Eid al-Adha holiday in August, as families gathered in the scorching heat to feast and celebrate, many regions experienced cuts to their water supply for three days, sparking protests and road blockages.
“It is annoying, but we’re used to it now,” said Lamia Smaine Dhib, a housewife on a farm in Kelibia, one of the towns affected. “We need a lot of water during Eid - for cooking, showering, for washing the intestines of the sheep,” she said, referring to the traditional method for preparing meat during the holiday. “The infrastructure is bad, we lose water in the distribution network. The summer months are peak tourist season, so there is a lot of water consumption,” said Louati of the OTE. “And because of climate change, the availability of water varies more than before.”
In 2017, the minister of agriculture created a committee dedicated to prioritizing climate change in the management of agriculture and water. “We are in front of a fait accompli - we need to do with what we have and it is only going to become less (water),” said Rafik Aini, coordinator of the committee and senior negotiator in climate change at the agriculture ministry.
Tunisia’s new Water Code, which was approved by ministers in September and is waiting to be debated by parliament, includes climate change as a factor to be considered in water policy decisions, unlike the original 1975 code.