Renewables-based Desalination: A Solution to MENA's Water Crisis


"You never miss the water till the well runs dry" is an old idiom that is becoming a harsh reality for the Middle East and North Africa region and globally. Water scarcity is now this century's imminent greatest problem, a clear and present danger. This is no surprise considering 85 percent of the world’s population lives in the driest half of the planet. The United Nations estimates that, already, 6 to 8 million people die annually from the consequences of disasters and water-related diseases, with a child dying from a water-related illness every 21 seconds. In developing countries, unsafe water causes 80 percent of all illness and disease, and kills more people every year than all forms of violence, including war. The situation is set to worsen. Water availability is expected to decrease in most regions, while future global agricultural water consumption is estimated to increase by 19 percent by 2050.


COMMENT:

Roger Middleton
September 4, 2013
Once again technology is seen as a sustainable answer when it will only give temporary relief and actually make the situation worse.
The Quattara Depression idea was mooted at least 30 years back for power generation: evaporation rates keep the new salt lake at a low enough level for the pipeline head from the Meditteranean Sea to generate hydro power. But what does it get you? Another inland salt lake with no drinking water. And as more water evaporates there is yet more salt. Check out other salt lakes in ME, Asia and South America: they are not burgeoning economies, they are dead. We may employ people temporarily to build and develop the scheme, but who will take responsibility for flooding their own land with salt water?
When nature is killing that many children and adults it is telling us, "don't live here" and as our population grows and the competition pushes people to live in harsher environments it will get worse. Technology will only postpone the inevitable day when we have to take responsibility for controlling our own numbers. Otherwise that is the balance nature will impose.
After all, are we not the most intelligent and developed species this planet has ever seen?
As a mature engineer one of my few regrets is that we seem to be increasingly rising to the wrong challenges: CSP desal is a great project for now, a bad idea for our children.

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