
Water Status in the Sy ri an Water Basins
16
Table 1. Characteristics of the Syrian water basins.
Water basin PopulationAreaa (Ha) Precipitation
(mm)
Barada & Awaj 5,700,0008630 275
Al-Yarmouk 1,404,0005764 318
Orontes 3,830,00018,362 415
Dajleh & Khabour 1,340,00021 ,129 279
Euphrates & Aleppo 5,930,00051,238 217
Desert 369,000 70,786 141
Coastal 1,780,0005049 1147
a. area inside Syrian (excluding the occupied lan ds).
The annual rainfall in Syria, which occurs from De-
cember to March, decreases from about 900 mm at the
coast to about 60 mm in the eastern part of Syria with an
average precipitation about 46000 MCM (Millions m3) [6,
7]. Many cities and rural areas have no wastewater
treatment plants and some farmers use wastewater in
irrigation, which has affected the surface and groundwa-
ter quality by increasing nitrate concentrations [8].
The most important water resources in Syria are
shared with other countries such as Euphrates, Tigris and
Orontes rivers, which have many treaties with Lebanon,
Jordan, Iraq, and Turkey to ease managing shared water
resources in the region [9].
2.2. Water Demand
Depending on its demand sectors, agriculture consumes
about 90% of the Syrian water, which indicates to a real
need for further development in irrigation techniques.
The total agricultural, domestic and industrial demands
were in 2010 ab out 15,400, 1214, and 648 MCM. Cereal
and dry legumes occupy more than 55% of the total cul-
tivated lands.
2.3. Water Sector Constraints
Many constrains are facing water use in Syria. These
include physical, economic, technical, and institutional.
Below a summary of these are given.
1) Physical constrains: Large seasonal difference in
rainfall requiring large storage capacity. About 60% of
the country receives less than 250 mm/year.
2) Economic constraints: Most water resources pro-
jects depend on exter nal funds, which are coordinated by
external consultants. This makes projects subject to vul-
nerability due to weak coordination and cooperation be-
tween different stakeholders. Corruption is another factor
that tends to weaken the project implementation and lo-
cal participation.
3) Environmental constraints: The limited number of
wastewater treatment plants, operation problems and lack
of public awareness has created many environmental pro-
blems such as surface and groundwater pollution using un-
treated wastewater for irrigation, and damaging of treated
effluent canals. Moreover, the absence of storm water
drains in big cities, especially Damascus, has a negative
effect on operation and maintenance of treatment pl ants.
4) Technical constraints: High water losses, lack of
wastewater treatment plants, groundwater contamination
due to high nutrient concentration in the treated wast-
ewater and slow implementation of modern irrigation and
water-saving technology. The losses in drinking water
system for example, are around 25%.
5) Institutional constraints: Many ministries are in-
volved parts of the water sector in Syria. The Ministry of
Irrigation (MoI) is responsible for monitoring, manage-
ment, and development of surface and groundwater re-
sources. The Ministry of Agriculture and Agrarian Re-
form (MAAR) is responsible for developing irrigation
practices in agricultural areas and reusing treated waste-
water. The Ministry of Housing and Construction
(MoHC) is responsible for drinking water supply and
treatment. The Ministry of State for Environmental Af-
fairs is responsible for water protection. Each ministry
has its own directorate in the governorates and many
ministries include water management in their annual
plans. However, overlapping and lack of cooperation is
negatively affecting efficient water resources planning
and management.
In view of the above, the objective of this paper was to
evaluate the water needs and supply in the different Syr-
ian water basins in order to achieve future sustainability.
Projections were made up to 2030 and 2050.
3. Material and Methods
Available water resources and water demands for each
water basin in Syria were estimated using all publically
available data from the Ministry of Irrigation (MoI), Cen-
tral Bureau of Statistics in Syria (CBS), Ministry of
Housing and construction (MOHC), and Ministry of Ag-
riculture and Agrarian Reform (MAAR). The future esti-
mated projections depend on the availabl e data.
3.1. Water Demand Estimation
“Table 2” shows the actual domestic, industrial, and agri-
cultural water needs in 2008 for the seven water basins
according to MoHC and MoI.
Table 2. Water needs.
Annual water demand (MCM)
Water basin Agriculture Domestic Industry
Barada & Awaj 675 340 33
Al-Yarmouk 205 118 32
Orontes 2195 298 235
Dajleh & Khabour 4669 126 11
Euphrates & Aleppo7003 526 153
Desert 118 42 10
Coastal 530 126 45
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