The sea to drink: obtaining fresh water from saltwater as a solution to the water crisis.
More and more countries in the African continent are betting on this seemingly
efficient alternative model, but one with high energy consumption and environmental
impact. And above all: who owns desalination plants in Africa? What are the environmental
consequences of this process? Who will truly benefit from desalinated water? Today,
almost three out of four natural disasters are water-related. By 2025, two-thirds of the
world's population will live in areas affected by water stress. This is already the case in
North Africa, where the water deficit exceeds 20 billion cubic meters in Morocco and
Egypt. Rabat aims to build around twenty desalination plants by 2030, which would cover
50% of its drinking water needs. Cairo has put $3 billion on the table to reach 3.3 million
m³ of desalinated water per day by 2025, compared to the current 830,000 m³. This
solution has already been widely tested in the Middle East, which holds 50% of global
desalination capacity. In the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait, and Qatar, 90% of drinking
water comes from desalination. However, it is a technique that requires the use of large
amounts of fossil fuels and weakens marine ecosystems. Morocco's Minister of Equipment
and Water, Nizar Baraka, announced on December 4, 2023, in parliament the construction
of 16 desalination plants from 2024 to 2030. With a total capacity of 1.49 billion m3/year,
these sixteen units are planned along the entire Mediterranean and Atlantic coast. The
minister also assured that six plants with a capacity of 135 million m3/year are currently
under construction. Currently, according to the minister's data, the country has fourteen
operational plants with a capacity of 192 million m3/year. Mohamed Taher Sraïri, a
professor at the Agronomic and Veterinary Institute (IAV), recalls that public authorities
aim, by 2030, for 15-20% of the country's water needs to be covered by non-conventional
water resources, particularly desalination of seawater. According to Taher Sraïri, this is "a
technology that still has limitations and uncertainties." And he continues: "When we
announce the irrigation of over 100,000 hectares with desalinated water, we should ask
ourselves what kind of agriculture can benefit from this resource. The answer is:
conventional agriculture." The professor also highlights a cause-and-effect relationship
between a proven increase in water usage (especially for irrigation) and the withdrawal
and use of seawater. "Agriculture in Morocco – which consumes more than 85% of
renewable water annually – historically relied on precipitation, then we moved to water from
dams, sold to farmers for 0.5 to 0.6 DH/m3 since the 1970s. Today, there has been an
increase in irrigated areas with water from underground aquifers, with a further increase in
price and an inability to verify the volumes actually withdrawn, given the lack of monitoring
of groundwater withdrawals. It is precisely following this increase in the demand for water
resources that the option of desalination is gaining ground," concludes the expert. The only
alternative would be to reduce water demand, "which would automatically entail a
containment of the ambitions of the agricultural sector." However, the development of
desalination systems must not compromise adequate education on the use and
management of water resources (for example, in terms of losses, waste, recovery) in favor
of an intensive agricultural model, too water-intensive and destined for export, such as that
of Morocco.