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Swiss push for “blue peace” in Middle East

A view of a water canal running from the Euphrates River into the semi-desert region of eastern Syria Reuters

Water shortages in the Middle East are so worrying that opposing camps in the region will have little choice but to cooperate, a Swiss-Swedish report warns.

Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey on Thursday outlined a new initiative in the region that aims to encourage the sustainable cross-border management of scarce water resources.














“In the future the main geopolitical resource in the Middle East will be water rather than oil,” she told reporters in Geneva.

Calmy Rey presented the new report, entitled “Blue Peace, Rethinking Middle East Water”, which follows wide consultations in Turkey, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, the Palestinian territories and Israel.

“The report comes to an alarming conclusion: five of the seven countries are experiencing a structural shortage and the debit of most of the big rivers has declined by 50 to 90 per cent since 1960,” she said.

The study by the Indian think tank Strategic Foresight Group, funded by Switzerland and Sweden, described the huge depletion of rivers such as the Jordan and Yarmouk over the past 50 years, the diminution of the Euphrates due to drought and the shrinkage of the Dead Sea to a small lake by 2050.

But it also recognised the differences between states, with upstream Turkey in a position to “influence prospects of peace” despite the collapse of a 1980s plan to pipe water to Israel and Gulf states. Downstream territories such as Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian territories were in the worst position, it added.

 

Cooperation

The 150-page report, which will soon be presented to the European Parliament, also argued that technical solutions such as desalination or wastewater recycling in Israel would ultimately have limited scope.

Purely unilateral solutions will mainly work for a decade or so but Israel will have to look for external sources and regional cooperation beyond 2020 to ensure its water security, the report noted.

“Unless there is a technological breakthrough or a miraculous discovery, the Middle East will not escape a serious shortage,” said Sundeep Waslekar, a researcher from the Strategic Foresight Group.

Switzerland has extensive experience in managing water resources with centres of excellence like the Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne (EPFL) as well as firms that specialise in filtering, stocking and distribution. It also spends SFr30 million annually on drinking water and irrigation development projects worldwide.

“With our experience we want to help manage the forthcoming crisis,” said Calmy-Rey.

The “Blue Peace” initiative has resulted in a number of recommendations. The most important involves the creation in 2011 of a joint water cooperation council initially limited to Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey. This would ideally lead to joint water management programmes. Swiss diplomats said they had already started to lobby the governments about this.

Another joint water council could also be created by Turkey, Syria and Iraq to manage the river basin of the Euphrates and Tigris.

“Relations between these three countries were poisoned in particular due to water issues. Since 2008 they have signed several regional cooperation agreements in the fields of trade, transport and telecommunications. They can now focus on water,” said Waslekar.

 

Boost for peace

The Swiss foreign minister described the new water initiative as a continuation of the Swiss-backed Geneva Initiative, an unofficial peace accord for the Middle East launched in December 2003, which she says is still not dead.

“It’s about moving forward with talks on the ground between all the actors concerned and of finding a way of overcoming current blockages,” she said.

This new idea is both political and technological, special Swiss envoy to the Middle East Jean-Daniel Ruch, told swissinfo.ch.

“Israel is still technically at war with Lebanon and Syria, and has peace treaties only with Jordan and Egypt. But by showing this strong common interest in water issues, we hope in the long term to create a political commitment for greater cooperation and peace,” he commented.

Water supply is a global concern. A recent United Nations report stated that $80 billion should be invested annually in water infrastructure in developing countries until 2015 and then double the amount until 2025.

Since 1989 the price of petrol has increased by 6.2 per cent annually while the price of water has increased by 6.3 per cent, according to a report published in January by the World Economic Forum.

Fifty years ago the River Jordan had a water supply of 1,300  million cubic metres per year; it is now some 100-200 million cubic metres. At the time of the Oslo Peace Talks in 1993, Israeli and Palestinian mountains provided 689 million cubic metres of water annually.

Today it is seven per cent less. In 1960 the Dead Sea extended over 950 square kilometres; it is now only 650 square kilometres.

(With input from Frédéric Burnand)

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