Leveraging research for sustainable development in the Arab region
Views
0% 0
Downloads
0 0%
Timeless limited access
View/Open
Corresponding Author
Date
2020-01-01
Date Issued
ISI Journal
Impact factor: 1.254 (Year: 2020)
Authors
Citation
Faraj El Awar. (1/1/2020). Leveraging research for sustainable development in the Arab region. Desalination and Water Treatment, 176.
Abstract
The Arab region is the driest in the world, and it is home
to 14 of the 33 most water-stressed countries on the planet.
Additionally, low level of natural water abundance is intensified by wasteful approaches to water management and pollution from untreated wastewater. Several Arab countries
have nearly exhausted their resources of renewable water,
and some of them are facing frequent and prolonged water
shortages that force them to make hard choices, regarding
the management and allocation of these limited resources,
in order to ensure the achievement of the sustainable development goals on national level. Prioritization of various
demands for water resources, in such countries, is a complicated multi-dimensional process that entails not only
national policies but also science-based solutions.
The International Center for Agricultural Research in Dry
Areas (ICARDA) has conducted research, for more than 40
years, in the Arab region with an overall objective of enhancing food security and sustaining livelihoods of local rural
communities through integrated agricultural production
systems. Since its establishment in 1977, ICARDA has worked
on the development of scientific approaches for the optimization of water and energy use for food production. Such
approaches are instrumental for halting the alarming process
of natural resources degradation, and ultimately breaking
the vicious cycle connecting such degradation to poverty, in
the Arab region.
ICARDA research findings have been used throughout
the Arab region within national and regional interventions
aimed at enhancing agricultural productivity while ensuring the long-term sustainability of the natural resources base
in the region. Some of these interventions have led to significant improvements both in terms of efficiency gains in
natural resources use and in terms of national policies. This
presentation aims at showing these findings, how they are
being used in various ICARDA interventions, how they contribute to improved national policies, and ultimately how
they contribute to sustainable development in the region.