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Water industry focus
Dubai
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Arab states will need to invest a $100 billion on desalination over
the next decade if demand for water keeps growing at the current pace,
especially in the Gulf region, according to the organisers of the annual
Middle East Electricity exhibition.
This year’s event, for the first time in 2007, a dedicated area of
the event for the water industry, created due to the intense demand for
international expertise and technology.
Firmly established as the Middle East’s largest and longest
established showcase for the global energy industry, Middle East
Electricity takes place at Dubai’s International Exhibition Centre from
February 11 to 14.
The event comprehensively covers the entire spectrum of the energy
industry, featuring specific sections for Gas, Power Generation, New &
Renewable Energy and Lighting, reinforcing its international position as
the power behind the Middle East energy industry.
“Industry data shows that regional demand for desalinated water is
growing at an annual average of six per cent, double the global average,
and regional governments have already invested an estimated 10 billion
in existing and new projects to boost capacity,” said Sarah Woodbridge,
group director exhibitions, IIR Middle East.
“But with a surging population and large-scale economic
diversification across the Gulf, a further investment of around $100
billion is required over the next 10 years to meet the rapidly
escalating demand for water.”
Dubai, globally acknowledged as a success story for building world
standard infrastructure, has found that population growth, a huge
increase in the number of tourists and rampant economic development are
posing serious threats to its water resources.
“Scarcity of water resources in Dubai is evident,' said a recent
study conducted by Ahmad Ali Abdullah Murad and Hind Al Nuaimi from the
Department of Geology at UAE University's College of Science.
“Dubai is worried about finding sufficient water for each person
living in the emirate and has great anxiety about how it will provide a
suitable amount of water for its rapidly expanding economic activities.”
A report issued in Dubai earlier this year said that the imminent
shortage of water resources in the emirate has been compounded by the
real estate boom, with new construction projects taking a larger share
of resources.
This is alarming since this region is already the driest in the
world. The Gulf remains the largest market for water desalination in the
world and local municipalities are seriously examining ways to double
existing capacity to meet regional demand.
Officials at Dewa (Dubai Electricity and Water Authority) expect
daily water demand to reach 341 million gallons per day and daily
electricity needs to reach 8,513 megawatts by 2011.
The arid climate of Dubai, where rainfall is sparse, limits
conventional water resources and recent studies show that temperatures
are increasing.
In August 2005, Dubai temperatures reached 47.3ºC, the hottest day in
the city for six years. Demand for water in Dubai during the peak summer
season rose 10 per cent to touch 184 million gallons per day in 2004.
With temperatures soaring to more than 40ºC for at least six months of
the year, the threat of no water or electricity in households or in the
workplace is a matter of serious concern, and is one of the top
priorities for governments throughout the region.
It is estimated that more than 7,500 desalination plants are in
operation worldwide, of which 60 per cent are located in the Middle
East, with the world's largest plant, which produces 128 mega gallons
per day of desalted water in Saudi Arabia.
Before the current conflict, Lebanon and Syria were the only two
countries in the Middle East with adequate water supplies according to
the UN’s definition of levels critical for development.
Whilst that has now changed with the damage inflicted on Lebanon’s
infrastructure, it is widely accepted that long before 2050, every
country in the region will face dire water shortages that only
desalination technology can avert.
Oman currently supplies 61 per cent of its annual residential water
through desalination, and Koussai Quteishat, director of the Oman-based
Middle East Desalination Research Centre says that it is vital to find
ways to make the process less expensive.
“I believe that desalination is the top technological approach for
increasing water supplies in the region, but other measures, such as
recycling water and reducing consumption, as Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and
the UAE, which provide water for free, use more per person than anywhere
else in the world, are also essential.”
Typical of the large scale projects currently being implemented,
Qatar Electricity and Water Company Corporation (QEWC) has closed its
$485.5 million financing of its Ras Abu Fontas B2 facility to fund the
development of a 567MW power and 29.1 million gallons per day water
desalination facility in Qatar, next to the existing Ras Abu Fontas
facility - this 25 year deal established a new project finance benchmark
for the longest loan tenor for any Middle East power and water sector
deal.
Jordan’s Minister of Environment, Khalid Irani, recently outlined the
government's commitment to utilising renewable energy, saying that the
government was keen to increase the use of solar and wind power in light
of rising international oil prices.
“The government supports all efforts towards the use of renewable
energy resources because renewable energy will not only reduce the
energy bill, but is also cleaner and environmentally friendly,' he said.
“Investing in renewable energy resources will create new businesses
and more job opportunities.”
Twenty per cent of houses in Jordan now use solar water heaters and
the number is expected to quickly rise due to high international oil
prices.
Technical studies are currently under way for a further project in
Saudi Arabia, which should be implemented within the next two years,
creating a solar thermal plant as part of the Ayla Project in Aqaba that
will generate power for the desalination of water and air conditioning.
Over 30 water pumping stations are using solar energy in the desert, and
there are also stations using wind turbines to pump water.
Other innovative approaches focus on ‘green buildings’, and this led
to the creation of the Emirates GBC (Green Building Council), which is
part of the World GBC, which has an overall mandate of making buildings
‘green’ across the world. The 10 country members include the US, Canada,
Taiwan, Mexico, Spain, Brazil, Australia, India and now the UAE.
Wafi City’s district cooling plant in Dubai is the first building in
the Middle East to be LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design)-certified.
This means it was rated based on the LEED system, which assesses
building performance and sustainability goals based on industry
standards developed by the GBC in the US. The first phase of the
project, an 8,100-tonne central cooling plant is already on line. The
overall project incorporates five or six different phases and will
provide a total of 20,000 tonnes of district cooling for the new Raffles
Hotel, as well as for the existing Wafi City. Around 40 per cent of
Wafi’s air conditioning energy costs will be reduced when this new
district cooling plant comes on line, which is a massive leap in energy
conservation.
“The opportunities for the control and instrumentation industry are
huge over the next few decades, as considerable infrastructure is
required,” said Woodbridge.TradeArabia News Service