1 of 40 Energy, Water and Food Security Nexus: The Scope of Desalination with Renewable Energy in the MENA Region Bekele Debele Negewo Water Resources Specialist, World Bank Oman, February 22-23, 2011
Dec 16, 2015
1 of 40
Energy, Water and Food Security Nexus: The Scope of Desalination with Renewable
Energy in the MENA Region
Bekele Debele NegewoWater Resources Specialist, World BankOman, February 22-23, 2011
2 of 40
Outline Overview of the challenges
What is the World Bank doing?
MENA Regional desal and RE Nexus Next steps
3 of 40
0 10 20 30 40
Middle East & North Africa
South Asia
Western Europe
East Asia & Pacific (incl. Japan&Koreas)
Sub-Saharan Africa
Europe & Central Asia
North America
Latin America & Caribbean
Australia & New Zealand
1000 m^3 / year
MENA has the lowest per capita water resources worldwide…it’s dwindling fast!
Annual renewable water resources per capitaSource: FAO AQUASTAT (2007)
a) Average annual renewable water resources for MENA (2007) was 1,200 m3/capita, compared to 7,000 m3/capita globally..
b) 14 out of the top 20 Water Scarce Countries are in MENA
c) Water scarcity will become a challenge to growth
4 of 40
0
1,000
2,000
3,000
4,000
1950 2000 2050
Cubi
c met
ers
per c
apita
Source: Adapted from FAO, 2008
Water scarcity trend in MENA…scary!
Renewable water availability per capita… projected to be less than 650 cubic meters per capita per
annum by 2050
Since 1950, per-capita renewable water resources have fallen by about 75%
5 of 40
…today’s water deficit in MENA is met by overexploitation of groundwater and—to a lesser degree—by fossil-fuelled
desalination, but this is not sustainable…
Groundwater withdrawal (as
a % of “safe” limit)
Source: Saghir (2003)
6 of 40
…reality is also that the scarce water is managed and used less efficiently
1. Irrigation consumes 80% of water withdrawn region-wide- Water use efficiency in agriculture is low (< 50%)
2. Losses are also common in water supply systems- Leakages in the network are common (over 10-30%)- High UFW (over 30-40%)
3. Pervasive subsidies in energy and water sectors- Lead to overutilization of the scarce resource- Financially unsustainable systems
7 of 40
Climate change will exacerbate water scarcity
The combination of climate change and population growth are projected to reduce available water resources per capita by 50% in 2050.
Increasing water scarcity will negatively affect• Economic growth• Public health and quality of life• Food security • Regional stability
Implications of climate change in the region include:• Increased temp. and reduced overall precipitation• Reduced average runoff• Increased climate variability (longer dry spells and higher rainfall
intensity
8 of 40
What does the future hold…..?WATER:• Water deficit is projected to increase from 50 BCM per year today to 150- to 235
BCM per year by 2050, based on the level of water use efficiency and wastewater reuse adopted, 2/3 times the physical volume of the Nile River flow…scary!
ENERGY:• Correspondingly, about 31 billion barrels of fuel is needed to desalinate about 150
BCM of water per year by 2050 (e.g., KSA today uses > 1.5 million bbls/day for desal)…not sustainable
Environmental impacts/GHG Emissions:• Which corresponds to 9.6 GtC (gigatonnes of carbon) of CO2 emissions per year by
2050….not sustainable (global good)
And food security…?• 60 % of food from irrigated agr. (21 Mha, consuming 251BCM+)• In some areas, fossil groundwater is being exploited for irrigation…not sustainable…
rainfed plays a good role but threatened by Climate Change.
9 of 40
Addressing the challenge requires multi-pronged approach
1. Demand side management: a) Strengthen institutions to support a move towards more efficient
resource useb) Support policies that rationalize demand for water servicesc) Support investments in efficiency improvement
2. Supply Augmentation:a) Introduce/scale-up technologies in desalination and reuseb) Support innovations in renewable energy (e.g., CSP)c) Support innovations in concentrate management d) Support water quality protection and storage capacity, including
aquifer recharge…
10 of 40
Desalination potential is on the rise in MENA
Forecasted Desalination Capacity (2008-2016), 12 MENA countries are in the TOP 20 globally. .. and the trend is projected to continue beyond 2016 with more MENA countries coming into picture, especially Egypt
source: GWI (2008)
11 of 40
12 of 40
Rationale for Action….• Water is scarce in the region, and getting scarcer with time…water will
become a challenge to growth…the trend is not sustainable
• Desalination on a larger scale has environmental and energy implications (brine, GHG emissions, energy security)…should be sustainable.
• Renewable energy (e.g., CSP) is possible, making it a feasible energy alternative…MENA is also suitable for CSP.
• Countries in MENA are already leading the innovation and market demand for desal: Some countries use desal water for 100% of their water need MENA countries are on the cutting edge of innovation in the combined use of desal and
RE, mainly CSP (e.g., Saudi and IBM)
• The region would benefit from cultivating the desert for a growing population and economy, using the natural resources that are barely tapped: desert land, salty water and solar energy, in order to ensure sustainable development…but action has to start soon and on large scale to benefit from economy of scale.
13 of 40
What is the World Bank doing?
Contribute to the Strategic Objective: Cultivating the desert for a growing population in MENA, using the natural resources that are barely tapped: desert land, salty water and solar energy ensure sustainable growth.
Objectives of the MENA desal and RE nexus study:
To gain a better understanding of the issues and options of water supply and demand in the region, the scope for demand and supply side management of water, and the scope for desalination and renewable energy nexus, including concentrate management;
To provide more analytical tools to decision makers in the region to evaluate the benefits and costs of the various options to deal with increasing water scarcity, and make informed decisions on the use of desalination, and the use of renewable energy in desalination processes.
14 of 40
What is the World Bank doing? Launched in August/ Sept. 2010
21 countries involved
Study: two components:Water availability and demand assessmentDesalination and renewable energy, concentrate
management
15 of 40
MENA regional desal and RE nexus study
I. Water availability and demand assessment, including Implications of climate change on water supply and demand water stress and options to close the gap, with associated costs—marginal cost of
additional water
II. Desalination and energy, with more focus on RE/ CSP review desalination technology ~ (feed water, energy source, location, etc) review the scope desalination with renewable energy (with a focus of CSP)
III. Concentrate management review options to deal with concentrate, with associated cost review of environmental laws and regulations that dictate safe disposal of
concentrates
IV. Case studies, including assessment of different financing modalities 3-4 case studies looking at: tradeoffs of alternative sources of water, energy, and
concentrate management. The case studies will also look at the various alternatives of financing modality.
16 of 40
a) Case studies, what areas should be covered? barriers (policies, technology, financing,
environment, etc)
b) Where, which countries?
c) Financing modality (cost-sharing)
Next steps