Morocco Water & Sanitation

Published: 8 March 2010 y., Monday

Karštą vasaros dieną berniukai apsipila vandeniu (Indonezija)
Challenge

Scarce and unevenly distributed rainfall has made water a key economic and social development issue in Morocco. The country has invested heavily in dams, water supply capacity and large-scale irrigation systems, to secure water for urban and agricultural demands. While largely successful, this strong supply focus was not accompanied by balancing policies aimed at sustainability, such as water demand management, water resource conservation and protection, and equitable service development in rural and poor communities. Morocco’s water management strategies needed to adapt to meet a number of challenges: growing water deficits, persisting gaps in service access, slow changes in legislation, limited infrastructure programs, pressing demographic growth, and climate change.


Approach

In 2007, a $100 million Morocco Water Sector development policy loan supported comprehensive water reform in Morocco to address legislative, institutional, financing, and planning gaps, and inefficiencies in Morocco’s water sector. Prior to the loan, IBRD supported extensive analytical work and capacity building with $2.2 million and another $8.5 million in trust fund grants. This analytical work, along with unprecedented levels of inter-ministerial dialogue, led to a reform program in which water-demand management, conservation and resource protection became new thrusts in Morocco’s water strategy. Investments were designed to build infrastructure while supporting implementation of new policies by central and decentralized agencies on the ground, such as for irrigation modernization and resource conservation, rural water supply, peri-urban service development and urban sanitation.


Results

Morocco is now on track to exceed the targets for water and sanitation services contained in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), thanks to greater public spending on water supply and sanitation infrastructure. Between 2005 and 2009, public expenditure in support of urban, peri-urban, and rural water supply and sanitation infrastructure programs rose to 25 percent from 5 percent of the total public expenditure for water (which also covers water resource management and irrigation). As a result of acceleration of rural water supply programs, including a $60 million IBRD-financed project, potable water access has risen to over 87 percent in 2009 from 50 percent in 2004.

The government has also placed new emphasis on water management policies, including development of new alternatives, such as desalination and water reuse. The MAD 34 billion National Irrigation Water Efficiency Program, launched in 2008, is aimed at generating water efficiency gains of 30-to-50 percent by converting conventional irrigation systems to water-saving technology. The World Bank Group also is assisting with the development of an innovative desalination private-public partnership in the Souss-Massa region, to complement irrigation resources and conserve groundwater.


Toward the Future

Besides the implementation of on-going projects, next steps in the water partnership with the Government of Morocco may include policy dialogue and lending to accompany further reforms and investment for climate change adaptation of water resources management, irrigation sector modernization, water supply and sanitation sector reorganization and regulation, and nationwide replication of peri-urban connection pilots.

 

Šaltinis: www.worldbank.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Europe funds safer surfing initiative

Four-year programme to protect kids from illegal or harmful internet content more »

Ten bombs kill 192, wound 1400 in Spain

Thursday's bomb attacks in Madrid railway stations killed 192 people and wounded 1400, the Spanish interior ministry said more »

Pope's poems top one million copies

The Pope wrote the poems at his summer residence outside Rome more »

Vilnius court examines Yury Borisov's deal

A complaint by Russian businessman with regard to the decision of the Lithuanian government on his expulsion from the republic is to be examined in the Vilnius court more »

The most important issue

European Parliament elections: public services key issue for Finnish voters more »

Belarus entrepreneurs strike

Thousands of entrepreneurs all over Belarus went on strike in a bid to protest laws stifling small business, the strike`s leaders said overnight more »

Banking customers to get their statements even more quickly

Wincor Nixdorf account service terminals with 32-bit controllers more »

Suicide attacks leave 56 dead in Iraqi city

In the two suicide attacks in Iraq on Sunday, the target was mainly the Khurdish settlements in northern Iraq more »

BBC apologises as Dyke quits

Director General Greg Dyke has quit as the BBC's crisis deepens in the wake of Lord Hutton's damning verdict more »

Demonstrators make their mark on Davos

Kept away from the VIPs and amid a heavy police presence, protesters have taken to the streets of Switzerland to demonstrate against the World Economic Forum more »