Arab News

Water security ‘poses a major challenge to 453m Arab citizens’

- Gobran Mohammed

The fourth Arab Water Conference titled “Arab Water Security for Life, Developmen­t and Peace,” organized by Palestine, the Arab League and the Arab Water Experts Network in Cairo, kicked off on Wednesdsay. The two-day conference was held under the auspices of Palestinia­n President Mahmoud Abbas, with the participat­ion of ministers of water resources as well as delegation­s from Arab countries and concerned regional organizati­ons. The conference included working sessions and presentati­ons of scientific papers dealing with issues related to water scarcity, drought and climate change.

Among the topics addressed were challenges posed by water scarcity and solutions to these, water demand and drought management, climate change, shared water resources and water diplomacy.

The conference also covered water desalinati­on technology, the management of groundwate­r resources, the financing of and investment in the water sector, and challenges related to water in the Arab region.

Abbas, in a speech delivered on his behalf by Deputy Prime Minister Ziad Abu Amr, stressed that resolving the issue of water shortage in the Arab world requires developing a unified and comprehens­ive strategy that defends the right to water in the face of occupation, exploitati­on, or encroachme­nt. It also entails the developmen­t of plans to confront water and food deficits due to existing challenges. Abbas said: “Arab water security poses a major challenge to nearly 453 million Arab citizens, and it is an issue that captures the attention of Arab countries, as represente­d by the Arab League’s decision to establish the Council of Arab Water Ministers.”

He added that the transnatio­nal waters of the Arab world are a matter of security.

“We stand with our brothers in Egypt and Sudan in their demands on everything related to the issue of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam and in ensuring that their water, agricultur­al or energyrela­ted security is not compromise­d,” Abbas said.

He called for reaching a binding legal agreement between Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia, in line with the statement issued by the UN Security Council in September 2021, in a manner that perpetuate­s cooperatio­n and consolidat­es common interests among the peoples of the region.

He also called for joint Arab cooperatio­n to find alternativ­e sources of water for major projects that benefit everyone in light of the severe water shortage in Arab countries.

Hani Sweilem, Egyptian minister of water resources and irrigation, affirmed that the water issue in Egypt is one of the most important pillars of Egyptian national security and a major axis in achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t.

 ?? File/AFP ?? A general view of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam in Guba, Ethiopia.
File/AFP A general view of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam in Guba, Ethiopia.

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