- It is estimated that some 30% of the world's
irrigated areas suffers from salinity problems and remediation is seen
to be very costly.
- Poor drainage and irrigation practices
have led to water-logging and salinization of about 10% of the world's
irrigated lands, thereby reducing productivity.
- There are significant areas of the globe
where serious soil and groundwater salinization are present or have
developed as a result of:
- rising groundwater tables, associated with
the introduction of inefficient irrigation with imported surface water
in areas of inadequate natural drainage
- natural salinity
having been mobilized from the landscape, consequent upon vegetation
clearing for farming development with increased rates of groundwater
recharge
- excessive disturbance of natural groundwater salinity through uncontrolled well construction and pumping.
- Water-logging and salinization in large-scale
irrigation projects are often the result of unavailable drainage
infrastructure, which was not included in the engineering design in
order to make projects look economically more attractive. These
problems are generally associated with large-scale irrigation
development under arid and semi-arid conditions, as in the Indus
(Pakistan), the Tigris-Euphrates (Middle East) and the Nile (eastern
Africa) river basins. The solutions to these problems are known, but
their implementation is costly.
- With population growth and concerns about
water scarcity increasing, several countries, especially in the Middle
East region, are developing desalination plants to convert saline water
(e.g. sea-water, brackish water or treated wastewater) into freshwater.
- The global market for desalination currently stands at about US $35 billion annually and could double over the next 15 years.
- In 2002 there were about 12,500
desalination plants around the world in 120 countries. They produce
some 14 million m²/day of freshwater, which is less than 1% of total
world consumption.
- The most important users of desalinated
water are in the Middle East, (mainly Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United
Arab Emirates, Qatar and Bahrain), which uses about 70% of worldwide
capacity; and in North Africa (mainly Libya and Algeria), which uses
about 6% of worldwide capacity.
- Among industrialized countries, the United
States is one of the most important users of desalinated water (6.5%),
especially in California and parts of Florida.
The section “Did You Know…?” is taken from the 1st United Nations World Water Development Report: “Water for People, Water for Life" (WWDR1, 2003)