Alvorlig vandmangel i Libanon

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Laurits Holdt

De fire millioner libanesere og en million flygtninge, der bor i Libanon, begynder at mærke konsekvenserne af vinterens manglende regn. Landbrugsproduktionen er faldet og eksperter advarer om sygdomsudbrud på grund af mangel på rent vand.

BEIRUT, 23 May 2014 (IRIN): Michel Achkar-Daoud is getting used to dry conditions on his farm near the eastern Lebanese town of Zahle, but says changing weather patterns mean it is probably time to get out of farming altogether.

Normally, about two thirds of his farm is planted with potatoes. When the drought started he scrapped those plans in favour of vegetables that require less water, such as okra, though such vegetables require more care and fetch far lower prices.

Achkar-Daoud estimates his profits this year, on a farm that at peak time employs 100 pickers, will be just US$6-7,000 – down from $14,000 in 2013. He says he is ready to sell the land and get out of farming.

The country has been severely affected by drought this winter – with rainfall less than half the previous year, according to the Lebanese meteorological authority.

Mohammed Qabbani, an MP who heads the Energy and Water Committee in the Lebanese parliament, thinks water shortages will be nationwide in the coming months.

“This year [the effect] is very big and if we have the same conditions for next year it will be catastrophic. We will start feeling it [the drought] in July and August and we will have shortages,” he says. “They will be for the whole of Lebanon.”

A few miles down the road, farmer Mohammed Ma’mo also bemoans the freak weather conditions that have decimated his produce. He mainly grows cherries but the dry winter has hit the crop, and the few rains that have come have been unusually strong – with one freak hailstorm destroying much of his fruit. Per 20 trees he normally gets 600kg of goods for sale, but this year he thinks it could be as low as 200kg.

A short-term crisis…

While agricultural production has already been badly hit, the effects of the drought on the rest of the Lebanese population are likely to be felt more acutely later in the year.

The fact that the small country is now home to over one million Syrians fleeing the civil war over the border is likely to make the crisis even more severe. Dr Hassan El Bushra, head of the World Health Organization in Lebanon, recently said the lack of clean water meant outbreaks of communicable diseases such as polio and cholera are now “inevitable”.

Qabbani agrees that the potential for a public health crisis is acute. “We have not seen such a level of rain since 1932 and in that year the population was less than one million. Now we are four million, [as well as] more than one million Syrians. They all need to drink,” he adds.

“In Europe, in America, they are trying to deal with sustainability, but here there is nothing.”

He believes that a series of cutbacks are necessary immediately, with the primary goal being to minimize consumption. “Any unnecessary use of water such as washing cars and cleaning the streets should be stopped,” he said. “They should also consider reducing water for vegetable cultivation. We could try to eliminate this and import more vegetables.” This measure, unsurprisingly, has been unpopular with farmers.

…with long-term causes

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