The National - News

Vital pipeline reduces severe shortages across Jordan

- KHALED YACOUB OWEIS

Beneath a long and dusty motorway, connecting Jordan’s capital Amman with the very south of the country, is a pipeline that provides a vital lifeline to hundreds and thousands of people.

The $1.1 billion Disi Water Conveyance Project, predominan­tly financed by the US and European government­s, became operationa­l in 2014 and carries 100 million cubic metres of water per year to Amman and other cities from Disi, a non-replenisha­ble aquifer on the border with Saudi Arabia.

While the project has reduced severe shortages in the kingdom, it has not solved all of them.

The volume of water it pumps across the country meets only one seventh of the municipal demand of the nation.

Authoritie­s are hoping, with more foreign aid, to repeat the Disi project on a larger scale, to end Jordan’s water shortage issues by the early 2030s.

The new plan is for internatio­nal companies to build a desalinati­on plant near Jordan’s only port of Aqaba and pump 300 mcm of water a year, parallel to the Disi pipeline, to Amman, using renewable energy.

Minister of Water and Irrigation Mohammad Al Najjar said the plan, named the National Conveyance Project, “cannot be postponed”.

He said desalinati­on was “a resource that would not be affected by the environmen­tal and operationa­l issues we are suffering”.

The issues Mr Najjar was referring to include the wide-scale digging of illegal wells across the kingdom that is siphoning off fresh water reserves.

A tender process began in 2020 and five finalists were chosen to submit bids for a 30-year concession. Among them are the state-owned Saudi utility Acwa Power, as well as consortium­s that include the Suez Group, a French conglomera­te involved in the Disi concession.

But a deadline for submitting bids has been repeatedly pushed forward, as the government sought more foreign aid for the project and the finalists asked for more technical and financial details.

The winning consortium is expected to receive three to four times more money from the government for supplying Amman than the Disi water.

Disi was awarded as a 25year concession to Turkey’s Gama Holding and GE Energy Financial Services. Under the deal, the government is paying the operators $125 million to $140 million a year for the water.

But water shortages still amount to one-quarter of demand, according to US Aid data. Disi’s water, which is transporte­d for 320km to Amman, is mixed with other water to reduce radiation. Some specialist­s say the reservoir could run out in 50 to 100 years.

Per capita income in the kingdom is $4,000 a year and Jordan’s public debt is larger than the size of its economy.

But foreign grants and loans in the past decade have helped implement Disi and several other infrastruc­ture projects, mainly in the water and transport sectors.

The 450km National Conveyance Project became a government priority after talks with Israel to draw water from a proposed desalinati­on plant on the Mediterran­ean failed two years ago.

The government said it has secured about $2 billion in grants and soft loans and other financing for the Aqaba-Amman project, with the funding coming mostly from the US, Europe and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns.

Israel already provides Jordan with 100 mcm a year, more than double its commitment­s in a 1994 peace treaty.

Two years ago, the two countries also signed a US-brokered deal, under which Israel would provide Jordan with 200 mcm of water in return for solar energy from Jordan.

But Jordanian authoritie­s have portrayed the Aqaba project as proof of the kingdom’s ability to make sovereign decisions and streamline the nation’s water security.

Jordanian households are reliant on a costly system of tanks and pumps, and sometimes wells, to store municipal water they often do not receive, as it comes once every one to two weeks. Transporti­ng water by lorry is common.

Mr Najjar said the ministry aims to reduce water lost to theft, illegal use, and leaks in the network from 50 per cent to 25 per cent by 2040.

It is a main condition for the donors and internatio­nal institutio­ns funding the Aqaba-Amman project.

Andrew McKim, director of water resources at the US Aid office in Amman, said transporti­ng the water would require a “huge amount of pumping”, unlike the Disi project, which relies mostly on gravity to pipe the water to Amman.

He pointed out the need to pass over mountains for the water to exit Aqaba and eventually run parallel to the Disi pipeline.

“It is a technicall­y feasible project done many times around the world,” said Mr McKim.

Internatio­nal involvemen­t has helped ensure the project meets high design standards, such as reducing use of fossil fuels and sparing the Red Sea any environmen­tal damage.

He cautioned that Jordan would still need to invest in reservoirs and other infrastruc­ture to take on water from the new source to successful­ly reduce the shortages across the kingdom.

“The National Conveyance project will be just the backbone,” said Mr McKim.

According to the tender, at least two large plots of land will be made available to the operator to build what is likely to be solar plants to power the project.

In April, the government postponed the deadline for bidding to July.

An executive in one of the internatio­nal consortium­s that qualified to bid on the project – who preferred not to be named – said global supply disruption­s and inflation, as well as the novelty of the project in Jordan, were probably tempering investor appetite.

Jordanian households are reliant on a costly system of tanks and pumps, and sometimes wells to store water

 ?? Getty ?? Disi’s project has not solved all shortages in Jordan, meaning many people have to pump water from wells daily
Getty Disi’s project has not solved all shortages in Jordan, meaning many people have to pump water from wells daily

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