As 11 of the 17 most water-stressed countries in the world are based in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region, more than 10 Ministers of the Arab countries will participate in the two-day Arab Water Convention scheduled to be held in February 20-21, 2023, at the Ritz-Carlton Dubai International Financial Centre in Dubai, UAE, to address the depleting water tables and impending water crisis in the Arab World and how to overcome those challenges.
Held under the patronage of the League of Arab States, the two-day event will be convened by the Arab Water Council, with special focus on the non-conventional water resources. More than 600 officials, experts, delegates and leaders will listen to more than 60 speakers who will address critical regional water-related topics, including in-depth projection of future actions.
The convention is also intended to timely bring all interested parties together to embark on implementing the COP27 outcomes. Governments, financial institutions, private sector and the civil society need to immediately engage in factual dialogues to address the subject.
According to the United Nations, around 40 percent of the world’s population is affected by water scarcity, while 80 percent of wastewater is discharged untreated into the environment, and more than 90 percent of disasters are water-related. As the Arab region witnesses one of the highest rates of water scarcity and a very critical freshwater situation, governments are increasing investments in water infrastructure.
As per data from BNC Network, more than 200 million people live under conditions of water scarcity and 160 million under absolute water scarcity. Nearly 87 million people in the region lack access to an improved drinking water source on premises and are required to collect water from public standpipes and sources, particularly women and girls.
“Over the past 30 years, the water table in the UAE has dropped about one metre per year. At the current rate, the UAE is projected to deplete its natural freshwater resources in about 50 years,” according to the World Bank.
Accordingly, development of the desalination projects will continue to be essential to social and economic development in the Gulf to meet the increasing water demand. Over 75 percent of worldwide desalinated water is in the Middle East and North Africa, 70 percent of which is in the GCC countries and 6 percent in Libya and Algeria. Collectively, Water Desalination Plant Projects in the MENA region are estimated at $39.3 billion.
As highlighted by BNC Network, the UAE Water Security Strategy 2036 aims to reduce the demand for water resources, increase water productivity, increase water-use efficiency and improve water quality by reducing pollution. The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is also focusing on water infrastructure and has $14 billion water projects under construction.
“By 2030, the effects of climate change will also take a toll on the challenge of water security, possibly reducing renewable water resources by a further 20 percent. The Arab Water Convention proposes to foster crucial dialogue to promote cooperation and exchange of knowledge and perspectives, exchange of cutting-edge technologies, advanced applications, and successful practices,” said Prof. Mahmoud Abu-Zeid, President of Arab Water Council.
“Treated wastewater in the Arab region, which has reached around 10 billion m3/year, constitutes a significant renewable water source. Technical and technological efforts must be exerted to properly manage its use, whether in agriculture or in the artificial recharging of groundwater aquifers. There is a need to improve the quality of treated wastewater in order to overcome obstacles that limit its current use.
“More than ever, the dialogue between different actors is now required for exploring pioneering solutions and for the mobilisation of public and private actions in order to promote better water resource quality and ensure sustainability.”
Convened by the Arab Water Council to address a specific water priority issue in the Arab region, the Arab Water Convention is part of a series of regional events responding to the region’s rapidly changing water challenges. The aim of the Arab Water Convention is to provide a regional and international platform to exchange state-of-the-art technologies, advanced applications, and successful practices on a specific water priority issue in the Arab region which is facing rapidly changing water challenges.
Prof. Mahmoud Abu-Zeid added, “Opportunities for new business models for non-conventional water resources will be disclosed. The world-class Water Expo, to be held on the sidelines of the convention, will also be an additional chance to showcase the latest water-related technologies, innovative solutions, and equipment, hence enabling successful business transactions and interchange of knowledge and know-how.”
The 2023 convention is dedicated to address the non-conventional water resources (NCWR) and the wealth of emerging opportunities for business and innovation the field of water resources management has to offer. The convention will also be an exclusive opportunity to foster business connections with a wide spectrum of high-level industry executives, planners, decision-makers and the public sector from different Arab countries and international partners. It will include a multi-stakeholder dialogue to promote the most efficient, adequate and innovative technologies, exchange knowledge, share best practices and ensure a qualified transfer of pilot experiences on emerging issues in the Arab region.
To achieve its objectives, the Arab Water Convention will address four critical themes including: Effective governance frameworks for the efficient use of non-conventional water resources; smart NCWR-business opportunities focusing, among others, on digital transformation and artificial intelligence; financing new bankable NCWR-business opportunities; and role of the private sector in promoting new NCWR-business opportunities.
The event, viewed as an accelerator for the uptake of NCWR in the region, targets Arab governmental representatives, international and regional organisations/donors, investors, finance and business stakeholders, decision-makers, industrial engineers and specialists in different disciplines of water, food and energy nexus in a changing climate. Gender empowerment and youth participation will be an important cross-cutting component of the convention.
The Arab Water Convention is being organised and promoted by GM Events, a Dubai-based multi-faceted event management company of international repute, having organised numerous unique forums and exhibitions that highlight the issues faced by various economic sectors across the Arab region.
Food & Water
Xylem, the leading water technology company committed to solving the most challenging water problems around the world, has announced the opening of its new USD 1.2 million service centre, state-of-the-art analytics lab and rental hub in the UAE — strengthening its position in the Middle East to better address the region’s water-related challenges.
Located in Jebel Ali Free Zone, the new facility will span over 10,000 square meters and will feature a wash bay, lifting and handling cranes and tooling, trimming and balancing machines, original spare parts, testing benches, a painting booth, programming and calibrating equipment and devices.
This move will enable Xylem to respond to any customer needs faster and provide tailor-made solutions such as real-time interventions by experts — 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. The service hub currently employs more than 16 staff, including engineers and technicians and is set to create 300 employment opportunities.
Speaking on the latest innovations from Xylem, Naji Skaf, Managing Director of Xylem Middle East and Turkey, said: “With this expansion, we seek to solidify our position in the Middle East region and provide a slew of benefits including quicker turnaround, greater convenience and access to our customers. Our new centre of excellence is poised to bring about a gamut of opportunities for us that will support and accelerate our growth.”
The development of the facility is in line with Xylem’s commitment to resolving key challenges and illustrates the company’s commitment to bringing together advanced technologies, application expertise, and smart sustainable solutions to customers in the Middle East region — where there are significant issues pertaining to the management of water and wastewater.
Sustainable agriculture and tech adoption: UAE bolsters sustainable food security resilience
The United Arab Emirates is leading the way regionally and globally in its strategic efforts to future-proof food systems in a push for greater self-sufficiency and more sustainable agriculture.
One of the ways to make agriculture more sustainable and environmentally friendly is through technology adoption – and the UAE is doing precisely that.
The UAE is among one of the world’s leading players in adopting technology in the agriculture sector, leading the way in the Middle East and North Africa region, experts believe.
“The UAE is one of the leading players [in AgriTech adoption], especially in the region, in adopting the latest technologies from around the world with the main agenda being more sustainable food production and food security, with a special focus on water-saving,” Yazen Al Kodmani, Partner at 3Y Agtech and Deputy GM at Emirates Bio Farm, told ESG MENA in an interview.
“You can find all types of high-tech, conventional, low-tech agriculture happening in the UAE in all aspects of agriculture whether its vegetables [being grown] indoors or fish, oysters, and even insects and mushrooms,” the AgriTech expert added.
Emirates Bio Farm has made its mission to develop and protect the UAE’s local food system through increasing local produce, tech adoption, and pushing for more sustainable agriculture.
With the ability to improve supply chain efficiency, transform food production systems, and reduce food waste, tech adoption has proven to be truly transformational for the agricultural sector.
Tech adoption is particularly crucial because the pandemic’s onset in 2020 wreaked havoc on almost every industry across the world; the agriculture sector was no exception. The global food system was threatened, and just as the world began to recover from the health crisis’ impact, a range of geopolitical issues earlier this year, again, caused wide-scale disruption, essentially threatening the state of global food security.
Recognizing these crises, the UAE took swift action and massively ramped up its food security strategy.
For decades, the UAE was known to import most goods, particularly when it came to food. However, since adopting the National Food Security Strategy in November 2018, the Gulf country has worked consistently to ensure an increase in the capacity of its domestic agricultural production and implemented strategies to mitigate any potential future food security risks in a strategic push to become more self-sufficient.
“Food security doesn’t just mean that we are never going to produce our own. Food security is also about reducing food loss and waste because that increases efficiency,” said Al Kodmani.
“It’s about diversifying [supply chains], so having five different sources.”
Al Kodmani added that while increasing local production is a key priority when it comes to food security, nutrition also needs to be taken into account.
Under its National Food Security Strategy, the UAE Government aims to continue to develop a comprehensive system based on enabling sustainable food production through the use of modern technologies, enhance local production, develop international partnerships, pass legislation and policies that contribute to waste reduction, improve nutrition, and to top the Global Food Security Index (GSFI) list by 2051. The GSFI assesses the global food environment by taking into consideration: food affordability, availability, quality, and safety.
The UAE aims to achieve zero hunger by 2051 by implementing more sustainable and resilient agricultural practices that increase food production, are environmentally friendly, and can simultaneously help maintain flourishing ecosystems.
A company that has been at the forefront of achieving the government’s ambitious vision is Ocean Harvest, a start-up that works to build climate-agnostic, land-based aquaculture technologies to create a sustainable environment for salmon fish.
Ocean Harvest aims to combat climate change by saving over 30,000 tons of carbon dioxide per year, eliminate micro-plastics through its self-contained environment – which will prevent the release of over 53 tons of microplastics a year – and contribute to water conservation by leveraging advanced wastewater technology solutions.
The start-up is also working to make food supply chains more efficient by taking salmon, a traditionally import-dependent market which has often relied heavily on air-freighting, and localizing its production closer to the end-consumer. In addition, by recycling and re-using fish waste, Ocean Harvest can divert over of waste a year from contaminating sensitive ecological systems.
Ocean Harvest is now in the process of finalizing the design of its inaugural 3,000-tonne-per-year farm in Abu Dhabi and plans to begin construction next year, bringing its first harvest to happen around 2026 or 2027.
“We are contributing to food security in the sense that they’re localizing the production of food, which is otherwise important, and perishable products like fruits and vegetables and fresh seafood products, which are typically air-freighted,” Robert Kupstas, Co-Founder and Chief strategy Officer, Ocean Harvest said in an interview with ESG MENA.
“Salmon is a cold-water fish, so it’s flown in from Norway, from Scotland, so there are some other varieties of seafood grown locally or regionally, but salmon is a huge market. This is a great opportunity to use technology to be able to localize that and deliver reliability of supply because the closure of airports and flights during COVID really showed the vulnerability that a lot of countries have on relying on imports,” he explained.
Kupstas is also one of the Co-Founders of leading sustainable agriculture start-up Pure Harvest, which has developed a novel solution for producing “tomatoes, salad [greens], and strawberries in desert climates, year-round,” he said.
“The main way that the company does this is through multiple climate control systems with cooling and dehumidification. Those are the main technology areas that the company is using to be able to solve the challenges in the region.”
In Pure Harvest’s tech adoption, the company’s approach was to focus on what the “core problem” was in order to solve it.
“We really just focus on innovation and climate, because that’s really where the pain points are in the region. There’s about six months of the year when it’s very hot and humid in the region, so we tried to solve that specific problem to extend the growing season.”
Current gaps in the market and challenges that lies ahead
Al Kodmani believes there is still an investment gap in the agriculture sector.
“It’s a bit tough; investment is needed. Agriculture is a huge industry. But the main elements that are being focused on in the UAE are food loss and waste, and traceability – those are very important for the retail sector and for food security,” Al Kodmani pointed out.
“Organic agriculture, sustainable regenerative agriculture, still has a long way to go because a lot of the high-tech indoor systems are limited in what they can grow. You end up seeing a lot of leafy greens like lettuce and strawberries, and maybe some cherry tomatoes, so high-value sensitive crops are what is being grown indoors.”
“We still have date palms and open fields, and for food security especially. It’s very important,” Al Kodmani added.
Strategic crops such as wheat, rice, soy, corn, and maize are essential to achieve food security.
“A lot of people say: we’re going to feed 10 billion people by 2050. Well, it’s these crops [that will be needed] so we still have a lot to do in terms of open-field crops and what you would call strategic crops.
Other significant challenges include freshwater use, which Al Kodmani says the UAE is “very much focused on,” and “balancing being a free-trade country in the world,” meaning that countries need to find the right balance to protect and develop their own agriculture sectors.
Echoing Al Kodmani’s sentiment, Kupstas believes that while the UAE has put a great deal of effort into its food security initiatives, it will most likely be a “medium to long-term process.”
Although the UAE has put a great deal of effort into ensuring food security, with many strategic initiatives already in place, Kupstas believes that achieving food security in the Gulf country will most likely be a “medium to long-term process.”
“In terms of actual production and actual footprint of projects and farms, I think we need a little more time to get there. But I think there’s definitely been a big push to get these projects going.”
However, he believes there are many more opportunities for future investment in the UAE’s agricultural sector.
“There are tons of opportunities… Any kind of highly perishable product – which is important in large quantities – I think, is well placed for disruption. There are other companies developing technologies related to poultry farming, and also solving climate-related challenges to cooling poultry farms.” Kupstas said.
Krohne delivers innovative produced water solutions for the oil and gas industry at the middle east produced water oil and gas symposium
KROHNE Middle East and Africa, one of the leading global manufacturers of process instrumentation, demonstrates its continued sustainable innovation commitment to the Middle East, by joining industry partners and peers at the region’s first produced water-specific event. Produced in partnership with Saudi Aramco in collaboration with the Produced Water Society, the 3-day symposium held in Al Khobar has gathered together leading players in oil and gas searching for and delivering solutions to tackle the produced water issues of today.
KROHNE, leveraging its long heritage and expertise in the oil and gas and water resource management sectors, has been able to reinforce technological credentials and share their expertise with the gathered business leaders. Key topics under discussion have revolved around technological, sustainable and collaborative solutions in converting a previously-considered waste product into a reusable commodity, reducing overall wastage of water produced as part of the oil production process.
Running for three days, from 21st to 23rd November 2022, the event provides an excellent opportunity for public and private sector stakeholders to experience and engage with the latest and greatest the industry has to offer. KROHNE will also host a roundtable session on Wednesday 23rd November 2022 on the pertinent and practical topic of “High Pressure Flow Measurement Of Produced Water For Re-Injection” for interested parties to understand KROHNE’s unique perspective and capabilities, allowing for knowledge exchange and potential partnerships to emerge.
Frank Janssens, Vice President, KROHNE Middle East and Africa, said: “KROHNE Group has played a key role in the oil and gas industry for decades around the globe. Our technological expertise has made us a reliable partner, enabling our partners and customers to measure critical readings throughout the oil and gas process and today we face increasingly finite resources that need to be optimised. We are facing a perfect storm of regulation and sustainable conscientiousness across industries today and KROHNE is well-placed to support informed decision making as we continue to measure the facts.”
The global fight against illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing reaches a new milestone
100 States endorse FAO Agreement on Port State Measures
Rome – Global action to fight illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing has intensified as 100 States have now committed to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s Agreement on Port State Measures (PSMA).
The PSMA is the first binding international agreement specifically designed to prevent, deter and eliminate IUU fishing by denying port access and use to foreign vessels engaging in or supporting such fishing.
Angola, Eritrea, Morocco and Nigeria are the latest countries to back the PSMA. Now 60 percent of port States globally, are committed to the agreement, which is a binding international instrument to combat IUU fishing.
“Rising consumer demand and transforming agrifood systems in fisheries and aquaculture have driven global fish production to its highest levels and there is broad recognition of the need to step up the fight against IUU fishing” says QU Dongyu, FAO Director-General. “It is encouraging to see more States support the PSMA in support of the Sustainable Development Goals.”
One in every five fish caught around the world every year is estimated to originate from IUU fishing, with devastating impacts on the sustainability of fisheries and the livelihoods of those who depend on them, as well as the conservation of marine ecosystems.
IUU fishing undermines national, regional and global efforts to achieve sustainable fisheries and its elimination is key to succeeding in reaching the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
“We have a responsibility to manage and use all aquatic resources sustainably,” said Manuel Barange, director of FAO’s Fisheries and Aquaculture Division.
“We need to work together to step up port controls and an adequate information exchange through the implementation of the PSMA. This will contribute to transforming aquatic food systems and maximize their role as drivers of employment, economic growth, social development and environmental sustainability.”
FAO recently launched the PSMA Global Information Exchange System (GIES), which collects and shares official compliance-related information with a focus on port inspection results, actions taken and port entry or denials. With the FAO Global Record of Fishing Vessels, Refrigerated Transport Vessels and Supply Vessels (Global Record), the platform supports States in their efforts to implement the PSMA and complementary instruments which aim to combat IUU fishing.
FAO has so far assisted more than 50 countries to review their legislation, strengthen their institutional capacity, improve their monitoring, control and surveillance systems and operations, to effectively implement port state measures and fulfil their international responsibilities as flag, coastal and market States.
Mission aims to help develop crops able to adapt to climate change on earth
Virginia, US/Rome/Vienna – The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) launched seeds into space today as they intensify their joint efforts to develop new crops able to adapt to the ravages of climate change here on Earth.
The seeds from the IAEA and FAO agriculture and biotechnology laboratories are travelling to the International Space Station just as leaders meet at the UN Climate Change Conference COP 27 in Sharm El Sheikh to discuss pressing environmental challenges, including the significant impact of the climate crisis on the world’s agrifood production systems.
“Nuclear science once again is showing us its extraordinary capability to tackle climate change,” IAEA Director General Rafael Mariano Grossi said. “I am hopeful this experiment will bring about breakthroughs: results that we share freely with scientists and new crops that help farmers adapt to climate change and boost food supplies.”
FAO Director-General QU Dongyu said: “The world’s millions of smallholder farmers urgently require resilient, high-quality seeds adapted to increasingly challenging growing conditions. Innovative science like space breeding of improved crop varieties can help pave the road to a brighter future of better production, better nutrition, a better environment, and a better life.”
Seeds of Arabidopsis, a plant commonly used in genetic experiments due to its unique features, and Sorghum, a nutrient-packed grain used for food for humans, animal feed, and ethanol, will be exposed inside and outside of the International Space Station for approximately three months to conditions prevailing in space, primarily microgravity, a complex mixture of cosmic radiation and extreme low temperatures.
Upon their return, scientists at the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre of Nuclear Techniques in Food and Agriculture will grow and screen them for useful traits to better understand space-induced mutations of plant seeds – a technique known as space mutagenesis – and identify new varieties able to adapt to changing terrestrial conditions associated with climate change.
According to the IPCC Special Report on Climate Change and Land, the stability of the world’s food supply will decrease in the future, severely affecting its most vulnerable people. The new crop varieties from space could help farmers and decision makers, who need to make substantial changes and investments in adapting to a changing climate, to sustain production and food quality.
The ongoing experiment is based on almost 60 years of experience of the Joint FAO/IAEA Centre in inducing mutations in plants and thereby speeding up their breeding with the help of radiation to develop new agricultural crop varieties. So far, more than 3,400 mutant varieties of more than 210 plant species that were developed using induced genetic variation and mutation breeding – including numerous food crops, ornamentals and trees – have officially been released for commercial use in 70 countries.
This experiment will be the first time the IAEA and FAO conduct genomic and biological analyses of seeds exposed to space mutagenesis. At the International Space Station, the seeds will be exposed to unique conditions that cannot be reproduced in a laboratory on Earth. One goal of the experiment is also to compare such seeds with the ones exposed to radiation in laboratory conditions to study DNA and growth effects.
This project will be part of the IAEA and FAO portfolio of climate change projects aimed at helping countries adapt to new climate realities, including food and water shortages and biodiversity losses, through nuclear science and technology. At COP27, the IAEA and the FAO will organize an event on 15 November to highlight how joint energy, food and water resource planning and management can contribute to climate-resilient development. More information about the event is available here.
Last week, the two organizations also agreed to intensify their collaborations in food and agriculture using nuclear science and technology. Directors General Grossi and Qu signed a Memorandum of Understanding on 31 October to increase innovative research and development to help countries achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals. New work envisaged include other key areas such as the ocean, the environment, water resources and nutrition.
Photo credit: Nicole Avagliano/Pexels
Promises by companies, banks and cities to achieve net zero emissions often amount to little more than greenwashing, according to a UN expert group report published on Tuesday, which set out proposed new standards to harden net zero claims.
The report, released at the COP 27 climate conference in Egypt, is intended to draw a “red line” around false claims of progress in the fight against global warming that can confuse investors and policy makers.
At last year’s climate negotiations in Glasgow, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appointed 17 experts to review the integrity of non-state net zero commitments amid concerns about “a surplus of confusion and deficit of credibility” involving corporate green boasting.
The report by the group, chaired by Canada’s former environment minister Catherine McKenna, found that “too many of these net zero pledges are little more than empty slogans and hype”, she said during a news conference launching the report on Tuesday.
“Bogus net zero claims drive up the cost that ultimately everyone will pay,” she said.
An estimated 80 percent of global emissions are now covered by pledges that commit to reaching net zero emissions.
The report set out a list of recommendations that companies and other non-state actors should follow to ensure their claims are credible. For example, a company cannot claim to be net zero if it continues to build or invest in new fossil fuel infrastructure or deforestation.
The report also dismisses the use of cheap carbon credits to offset continued emissions as a viable net zero strategy, and recommends companies, financial institutions, cities and regions focus on outright emissions and not carbon intensity – a measure of how much carbon is emitted per unit of output.
The report “gives companies, investors, cities, regions – and by implication, countries – a clear statement of what ‘good’ looks like,” said Thomas Hale, a global public policy researcher at Oxford University and co-leader of the Net Zero Tracker project which measures the effectiveness of such pledges.
“We need to be clear that most net zero targets are not on track,” he told Reuters, noting the tracker found that only half of companies with pledges have robust plans.
“Corporations have long hidden behind net zero announcements and carbon offsetting initiatives, with very little intention of really doing the hard work of transforming and cutting emissions,” said Teresa Anderson, global lead for climate justice at poverty-eradication non-profit ActionAid International.
“These recommendations will aim to keep them in line and close any loopholes.”
The Waste Lab is determined to transform sand into farmable soil, empowering businesses and communities toward a regenerative future
The Ones To Watch: The Waste Lab is determined to transform sand into farmable soil, empowering businesses and communities toward a regenerative future
Dubai, UAE (November 2022) Coffee Planet is working with women-led start-up, The Waste Lab, to create a circular economy by promoting zero waste solutions that are sustainable and transparent. Both homegrown businesses, Coffee Planet and The Waste Lab began as small enterprises making a splash and coming together to battle a global problem of Green House Gases emitted from disposing food and organic waste in landfills.
Revolutionising a region that has a lack of food recycling options, The Waste Lab aims to create an opportunity for every food scrap to become a solution rather than a burden on our society and environment by mimicking nature through its nature-based composting solutions. A further objective is to promote the segregation and repurposing of food waste in the UAE, where 3.37 million tonnes of food go to landfill every year and that interestingly imports 80% of its compost. Desert soil isn’t dead; it merely lacks organic matter, which can be added to the soil from compost. Cue Coffee Planet, shifting this start-up into the fast stream. For every 100 grams of coffee beans produced, 91 grams of solid coffee waste and wastewater is formed.
The repurposing process begins with Coffee Planet collecting discarded coffee grounds, which are then transported to The Waste Lab’s Control Station. The grounds are then weighed, checked for possible contamination, and taken to the composting station to create nutritive by-products that benefit the local soil, local farms and local jobs. Collections are purposefully routed to minimise carbon footprint and keep emissions low. This program not only benefits the environment but also contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals and pledges of the UAE.
The Waste Lab and Coffee Planet play a significant role in changing the coffee industry by creating a blueprint for other businesses to scale up steps towards a circular economy and by supporting long-term sustainability goals by establishing a community that practices proper organic waste sorting at the source and promotes circularity throughout the companies’ value chain.