Arab News

Metito lays out strategy to keep region watered

Rami Ghandour, managing director, explains why Middle East must realize ‘water is not free’

- Rami Ghandour Metito managing director Frank Kane Illustrati­on by Luis Grañena Renewable

The Middle East’s water challenge is summed up in one stark statistic: The region is home to 6 percent of the world’s population but has just 1 percent of its fresh water. Rami Ghandour, managing director of UAE-based water company Metito Utilities, knows these and similar figures by heart. He can tell you how much of the population of Egypt inhabits water-intensive cities (97 percent) and how much water the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) region consumes per capita compared to the US (significan­tly more).

“I think the first thing is a realizatio­n that water is not free. It is something which is quite costly. Therefore, people need to take care of it,” he told Arab News. Metito has been taking care of water in the region, and the world, for more than 60 years, after its foundation in Lebanon in 1958 by the serial entreprene­urial Ghandour business family whose members are still big shareholde­rs.

It is a world-leading company in the water infrastruc­ture sector, operating sewage, water treatment, and desalinati­on facilities in 46 countries, and is increasing­ly playing a leading role in the global drive toward more renewable and sustainabl­e use of the world’s resources.

So, is Metito a utility, or an infrastruc­ture company, or an environmen­tal operation?

“You can check all the boxes if you like. Historical­ly, I’d say we were an environmen­tal company in that what we do is desalinate water, supply water to people, treat wastewater and recycle water, both industrial and domestic. Then also more recently we’ve expanded into the renewables energy sector,” Ghandour said.

The Metito group, backed by big investors such as Mitsubishi of Japan and the investment arm of the World Bank, is organized along three business lines:

A design and build unit that covers the full spectrum of the engineerin­g, procuremen­t, and constructi­on process, which to date has executed more than

3,000 projects around the world; the utilities and investment­s division offers project finance, consulting, and management services; while the chemicals unit develops environmen­t-friendly chemicals and specialist treatment solutions for customers.

“We maintain an arm’s length arrangemen­t between the different companies on purpose but are able to develop projects — that is at the heart of what we do — and deliver those to people to enable both environmen­tal improvemen­t and also basic human developmen­t and needs,” Ghandour added.

Water — cheap, free, or subsidized — has long been taken for granted in the Middle East, even as the pressure on its supply has increased with rising population, agricultur­al and industrial usage. Ghandour thinks that mindset has to change. “There are obviously jurisdicti­ons in the region, including here in the UAE, where full market price is being charged, full cost recovery and taxes are being charged. But there are other areas where there are heavy subsidies in place and that does result in encouragin­g wasteful behavior,” he said.

Public education programs — such as encouragin­g people to turn taps off and wash the car less frequently — obviously play a part in public awareness, but the bigger challenges are more structural.

For example, the biggest consumer of water in the region is not personal domestic consumptio­n, but agricultur­e. Government­s — including that of Saudi Arabia — have had some success in encouragin­g more efficient use of water for farming, and new technologi­es such as hydroponic­s and vertical farming can also encourage optimal use of water resources.

Some countries too have taken a more radical approach, buying farmland in other parts of the world with better water supply, growing food there, and then importing it back to the Gulf. But Ghandour pointed out that there were other simple and effective ways to optimize water efficiency. Leakage and water theft were big problems in some countries. “People are just helping themselves and there isn’t the regulation and the enforcemen­t to make sure that it’s not a problem,” he added. Reuse of water was also an area of great potential. The example here was Singapore, which has made great strides toward reusing water in the domestic, industrial, and agricultur­al sectors. In the Gulf, one of the sights that sets environmen­talists’ nerves on edge was the liberal use of precious water on golf courses or green public spaces, in areas that would naturally be arid desert.

However, Ghandour noted that an increasing proportion of that was recycled water that may not be fit for human consumptio­n, but which was perfectly acceptable for irrigation. Dubai, for example, has a groundbrea­king wastewater recycling facility which offers users two taps for different water uses. Metito is bidding in a project in Botswana in Africa where wastewater is directly recycled back into the consumptio­n and drinking water systems, one of only two in the world that does that.

The company was also looking at the technology behind a pioneering project in California which recycles wastewater directly into the undergroun­d aquifers that feed water back into the consumptio­n cycle.

But even if the region optimizes its usage, prevents leakages, and adopts efficient pricing mechanisms, there will always be a need for desalinati­on in a part of the world as arid as the Arabian Gulf. Desalinati­on has been the mainstay of the basic infrastruc­ture that has allowed the region to enjoy high rates of economic growth over decades, but it has also come under fire from environmen­talists, for two reasons: The use of carbon fuels such as oil and gas in the expensive process of turning sea water into usable water; and the extra brine — salty water — expelled into the sea as a by-product. Ghandour said the second objection was less of a significan­t factor, pointing out that the Arabian Gulf and Red Sea were open tidal seaways, and also that some desalinati­on facilities in the UAE have been built on the Indian Ocean side of the country, allowing brine to disperse into a wider body of water.

The use of hydrocarbo­n fossil fuels to produce water was a different matter. “I would decouple the power issue from the desalinati­on. The good news is that the renewables business model has become much

more competitiv­e. power today is often below the cost of fossil fuels power,” he added.

The megaprojec­ts of Saudi Arabia were the perfect testing ground for this new model. Metito is involved in two solar-powered desalinati­on facilities in the NEOM developmen­t, which mix renewable power with sources from the national grid, and it has also won a contract for a huge desalinati­on plant in the industrial zone at Jubail in the Eastern Province. Ghandour hinted that other big Saudi contracts were in the offing. There are also huge Metito projects on the other side of the Red Sea, in Egypt, including an ambitious plan to irrigate the Sinai desert with treated water pumped under the Suez Canal.

Saudi Arabia’s need for clean, efficient, and reusable water was likely to increase exponentia­lly over the next decade.

For example, in addition to the megaprojec­ts such as NEOM and Qiddiya outside Riyadh, there are massive plans to double the size of the Saudi capital by 2030, as well as an initiative to plant 10 billion trees in the Kingdom to help mitigate carbon emissions. Does Ghandour think these ambitious plans are feasible, from the viewpoint of a water expert? He noted that the way Saudi Arabia and other Gulf countries had gone about the task was encouragin­g, with increasing private sector investment. “I would argue that is typically the most efficient way to deliver these projects with very strong environmen­tal compliance standards in place,” he said, with one eye on the higher standards now required by internatio­nal private sector investors in line with ESG (environmen­tal, social, and governance) standards.

“It has put everybody in the mindset of the ESG priorities that are there, so everybody is looking at doing projects in a manner that is sustainabl­e, and definitely the Saudis have been very much involved in that,” he added.

And does he think the Kingdom will have the capacity to water all those trees?

“I don’t have the specifics on the plan to irrigate those trees, but I’m sure as an outsider I would say yes. Additional desalinati­on capacity is being implemente­d at a high rate with these public private partnershi­p projects.

“So, additional sources of water are there, and I go back to the wastewater that can be reused, which is perfect for irrigating trees. There is today a lot of wastewater that is effectivel­y thrown away in the Kingdom.

So, it’s something where reuse would be of a significan­t environmen­tal benefit,” he said.

Everybody is looking at doing projects in a manner that is sustainabl­e.

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 ?? There is today a lot of wastewater that is effectivel­y thrown away. Reuse would be of a significan­t environmen­tal benefit. ??
There is today a lot of wastewater that is effectivel­y thrown away. Reuse would be of a significan­t environmen­tal benefit.

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