Mindanao Times

Water-scarce Gulf states bank on desalinati­on, at a cost

- CATHERINE HOURS

“WE HAVE water, and it’s the most important thing in a house,” says

Abdullah al-Harthi from the port city of Sur in Oman, a country that relies on desalinati­on plants.

But for Oman and the other Gulf countries dominated by vast and scorching deserts, obtaining fresh water from the sea comes at a high financial and environmen­tal cost.

In Sur, south of the capital Muscat, water for residents and businesses comes from a large desalinati­on plant that serves some 600,000 people.

“Before, life was very difficult. We had wells, and water was delivered by trucks,” the 58-year-old told AFP. “Since the 1990s, water has come through pipes and we’ve had no cuts.”

But these benefits -- relying on energy intensive processes that produce carbon emissions -- do not come without a cost, particular­ly as global temperatur­es rise.

The United Nations says 2019 is on course to be one of the hottest three years on record.

And there is another impact: the desalinati­on plants produce highly concentrat­ed salt water, or brine, that is often dumped back into the ocean.

Researcher­s say more than 16,000 desalinati­on plants around the globe produce more toxic sludge than freshwater. - Salty slurry For every litre of freshwater extracted from the sea or brackish water, a litre-and-a-half of salty slurry is deposed at sea or on land, according to a 2019 study in the journal Science.

All that extra salt raises the temperatur­e of coastal waters and decreases the level of oxygen, which can conspire to create biological “dead zones”.

The super-salty substance is made even more toxic by the chemicals used in the desalinati­on process.

Oman’s bigger neighbours produce the bulk of the brine.

More than half comes from just four countries -- Saudi Arabia, at 22 percent, United Arab Emirates with 20 percent, and smaller shares by Kuwait and Qatar, according to UN data. “Brine production in Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait and Qatar accounts for 55 percent of the total global share,” according to the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environmen­t and Health.

It said new strategies are needed “to limit the negative environmen­tal impacts and reduce the economic cost of disposal”.

This would help “to safeguard water supplies for current and future generation­s”.

- Savings, recycling At the Sur plant, “almost no chemicals” are used during the pre-treatment phase, as the water is naturally filtered through the cracks of karst rocks, said Mahendran Senapathy, operations manager at French company Veolia which runs the plant along with an Omani firm.

There are other ways to safeguard freshwater supplies, from encouragin­g savings and efficientl­y to recycling wastewater.

Antoine Frerot, chief executive of Veolia, said wastewater recycling will help resolve the problem of water scarcity.

He also pointed out that “reused water is less costly,” nearly one third less than that won through desalinati­on.

Omani authoritie­s continue to mount campaigns urging people to use water wisely, mindful that other demands -- especially the energy sector -- also guzzle up large amounts.

Across the Gulf, huge amounts of water are used not just for homes, gardens and golf courses, but also for the energy sector that is the source of the region’s often spectacula­r wealth.

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