Assessing Desalination Governance and the Promise of Technology in the Arabian Peninsula
الملخص
Desalination is expected to grow across the Middle East and
North Africa due to increased water scarcity. The cost of desalinated water
has decreased significantly over the last decades, but it has not reflected
the mounting environmental impacts of desalination. Desalination can
result in significant negative impacts on the environment, such as harmful
emissions and the destruction of terrestrial and marine ecosystems.
Sustainable desalination should address environmental problems across
the entire lifecycle of desalination plants, and embed desalination
activities within a larger good governance view. This chapter maps out
solutions and best practices relevant for the desalination industry using
the case study of the Arabian Peninsula. It provides three main solution
categories for making desalination sustainable, affordable, and safe.
First, technological remedies to address the environmental impacts of
desalination should go hand in hand with environmental regulation.
Solutions related to lowering pollution, waste and marine impacts of
desalination require clear and enforceable regulation frameworks that
include thresholds, standards, reporting mechanisms and monitoring
plans. Second, providing affordable desalination requires collaboration
between the state, the private sector, and civil society. The private sector
can share some of the desalination costs through joint ventures with
state companies. Civil society and donor organizations can provide
technical knowledge and aid programs in order to expand small-scale
desalination for remote communities. Third, safe desalination requires
the protection of desalination infrastructure as critical assets. This
includes paying attention to the operational security of desalination
plants and developing contingency plans. Related to this, regional cooperation through knowledge sharing and joint action to mitigate the
cross-country impacts of desalination activities is important for regions
such as the Arabian Gulf. Overall, sustainable desalination is a multi-actor
task that should integrate the perspective of water policymakers with
that of desalination plants’ managers and operators. While desalination
managers prioritize issues related to their technical performance,
policymakers should encourage more collaboration and co-development
of environmentally friendly desalination. Public leadership is important
for lowering the desalination cost, investing in green desalination
technologies, providing clear institutional frameworks, and improving
awareness about water conservation in collaboration with civil society
معرّف المصادر الموحد
https://research.sharqforum.org/mena-water-security-task-force/DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/41410المجموعات
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