Arab News

Jordan’s water crisis deepens as climate changes, population grows

- Amman

At a private undergroun­d well in Amman, Imad Suleiman waits for hours to pump water into the container on his truck that he then sells on to private customers in the sprawling city of 4 million.

He has a growing clientele among the residents of Jordan’s capital, pushed by a combinatio­n of climate change, population growth, corruption and creaking infrastruc­ture to buy from costly private tankers rather than rely on tap water that only runs for one day a week.

“This year the increase (in demand) compared to previous years is around 70 to 80 percent,” Suleiman said. The rooftop tanks where his customers store their water now pepper the city’s landscape.

While climate change has brought drier weather to the Middle East, Jordan has fared worse than its neighbors. “Rainfall did not exceed 60 percent of the average,” said Water Ministry official Omar Salameh.

Meanwhile, demand had risen sharply. Jordan’s population has doubled in the past 20 years, with waves of refugees, including more than 1 million Syrians, taken in.

The share of water per person per year has plummeted to 80 cubic meters from 3,400 at the turn of the century, official figures show, and Salameh says available supplies are only enough for 3 million of Jordan’s 10 million inhabitant­s. With aquifers beneath the desert over-pumped and flows in the Jordan-Yarmouk rivers hit by upstream diversions in Israel and Syria, farmers in the Jordan Valley, the country’s breadbaske­t, are also feeling the pinch.

“Water scarcity affected us, we cannot grow summer crops which we usually do and can give us good financial returns,” Jehad Tawalbeh, a farmer who inherited his farm from his father, said.

Agricultur­e now consumes around 60 percent of supplies, but Jordan’s water problems are aggravated further by corruption and poor planning, with more than half of the pumped water estimated to be lost by theft and leaky pipes, despite billions of dollars of funds poured in by major Western donors.

Projects ranging from dozens of dams, reservoirs to water treatment plants and a $1 billion pipeline transporti­ng fresh water from a large reservoir in the south to the capital Amman have been no more than stopgap measures.

A Stanford University study released last 2021 painted a bleak picture showing per capita water use in Jordan could halve by the end of this century.

Without interventi­on, few households in the arid nation will by then have access to even 40 liters of piped water per person per day, it said.

 ?? AFP ?? A section of the Jordan River flowing along the border with Israel, south of the Sea of Galilee, one of the main water sources in Israel.
AFP A section of the Jordan River flowing along the border with Israel, south of the Sea of Galilee, one of the main water sources in Israel.

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