The per capita share of water in Jordan is further declining due to the influx of Syrian refugees, dropping to a minimal 120 cubic metres (cm) per year, said water and irrigation minister Hazem Nasser.
He said the latest figures regarding water consumption are well below the international water poverty line of about 120cm set by the World Health Organisation (WHO).
"Jordan is 88 per cent below the (international) water poverty line," he said, noting that the Kingdom is the second or third poorest country in water resources, according to international classification, and highlighted the serious impact of the refugees’ influx on the resource-poor Kingdom.
Nasser said the water scarcity has been posing socio-economic and political pressures prompting authorities to allocate extra funding as they try to find water sources through high-cost projects such as the Dissi water conveyance project, building dams and desalinating water to ensure "acceptable minimum levels" of supplies that meet WHO specifications.
However, the minister referred the water poverty to other reasons, foremost being a rising population, drought and scarce rains that feed springs, particularly in remote regions.
Source: Petra
GMT 11:07 2017 Monday ,30 January
Egypt experience dailyGMT 20:09 2017 Monday ,23 January
Palestin's ministerGMT 14:14 2017 Saturday ,21 January
Plans returnGMT 11:23 2016 Sunday ,20 November
US climateGMT 14:08 2016 Saturday ,19 November
'We count on your pragmatism'GMT 10:07 2016 Tuesday ,15 November
Iran missile programme 'non-negotiable'GMT 12:57 2016 Monday ,14 November
Tax on US products if Trump scraps Paris climateGMT 17:01 2016 Saturday ,12 November
‘No turning back,’ says head of UN climate talksMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor