Water in the Arab World

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Introduction: Beyond WRM— Unbundling Water Management in MNA Countries  

 Over the past two decades, water management in MNA countries has been strongly influenced by the idea of integrated water resource management (IWRM). This process advocated new approaches for the assessment, management, and development of freshwater resources. IWRM processes attempt to provide holistic solutions to water issues. They depend on the commitment of governments and communities to adopt new approaches and back them with “substantial and immediate investments, public awareness campaigns, technology development, capacity building programs, and legislative and institutional changes” (Salman 2006). In the MNA context, IWRM is particularly vital because hydraulic infrastructure plays such a critical economic role. These countries are in either the arid or hyper-arid zone, depend on seasonal rainfall, have very few rivers—some of which carry runoff from other countries—and often rely on fragile (and sometimes nonrenewable) aquifers. Consequently, their economies are much more sensitive to the way that water is extracted, conveyed, and consumed than are the economies of other regions. Frederiksen (2005) distinguishes between resource stewardship (which is always a function of government, exercised on behalf of the nation) and service provision (which may be public, private, or cooperative). Once water resources are scarce and the possibility arises that one use affects another, the stewardship function must set some of boundaries for service providers to protect the interests of all users. 

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