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WATER WORLD
Syrian refugees draining water-poor Jordan dry
by Staff Writers
Amman (AFP) June 1, 2012


Tens of thousands of Syrian refugees who have fled from carnage and violence at home to neighbouring Jordan are draining the desert kingdom's meager water resources, officials and experts say.

It is a new challenge for Jordan, one of the world's 10 driest countries, where desert covers 92 percent of its territory and the population of 6.7 million is growing by 3.5 percent a year.

The tiny Arab country has given refuge to waves of Palestinian and Iraqi refugees because of regional conflicts over the past decades, and now the kingdom is hosting up to 120,000 Syrians.

"The majority of Syrian refugees are concentrated in the northern cities of Mafraq, Irbid, Ramtha, Jerash and Ajlun. All of these areas already suffer from water shortage," Fayez Bataineh, secretary general of the Water Authority, told AFP.

"They add pressure to our limited water resources, and we need to be extra careful and wisely manage these resources."

Years of below-average rainfall have created a shortfall of 500 million cubic metres (17.5 billion cubic feet) a year, and the country forecasts it will need 1.6 billion cubic metres of water a year by 2015.

"Each Syrian refugee needs at least 80 litres of fresh water a day, so 9,600 cubic metres per day for 120,000 people. The cost of this subsidised water supply is 13,000 dinar ($18,000) a day, not to mention other related expenses," said Adnan Zubi, assistant secretary general of the Ministry of Water and Irrigation.

"It is not the first time that Jordan hosted forced migrants, but our water resources and infrastructure are already overburdened."

Struggling to battle a chronic water shortage, Jordan is mulling controversial plans to extract water. It is tapping into a 300,000-year-old aquifer, despite concerns about high levels of radiation, while studying ways to build a canal from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea.

"When my family and I fled to Ramtha from Homs several months ago, we could not find enough drinking water," said Abu Eid, who has two sons and four daughters.

"Sometimes, I avoided eating in order not to go to the toilet later because there was no water to wash. But we have adapted to the situation."

Maher, another Syrian refugee living in the border town of Ramtha, said he needs to buy water every day.

"We have water shortages all the time. I shower once every 10 days," he added.

But Basma, a 25-year-old Syrian refugee woman in Irbid, disagreed.

"I did not face any water problems in Jordan. I think the Jordanians are doing what they can to help us and things are fine thank God," she told AFP.

-- Water-rich, water-poor --

According to the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), more than 20,000 Syrian refugees are registered in Jordan.

Aoife McDonnell of UNHCR Jordan told AFP that the UN organisation is aware that "hosting such large numbers of 'guests' ... severely strains already scarce resources, particularly in relation to water availability and consumption, waste management, sewage systems, energy, health and education."

Jordan provides free medical services to UN-registered refugees, while more than 5,500 Syrian students have enrolled in public schools.

"This reliance on local services and infrastructure also brings increasing pressure on the already vulnerable host populations of Jordan, as it is coupled with major water scarcity in the region, rising temperatures and a resulting negative impact on food production," McDonnell said, urging international support for the kingdom.

Jordan's average annual water consumption stands at around 900 million cubic metres, but more than 60 percent of this water goes to agriculture, which contributes 3.6 percent to gross domestic product, according to official figures.

"The Syrians came from water-rich areas to almost parched parts in Jordan," said Abdelrahman Sultan of the Jordanian-Israeli-Palestinian non-governmental group Friends of the Earth Middle East.

"They consume water here the same way they used to consume water in their country."

The Ministry of Environment said demand for water is expected to increase.

"This requires better infrastructure in order to ensure a healthier environment for the refugees, a project that would cost a lot," Ahmad Qatarneh, the ministry's secretary general, told AFP.

The government says it is still difficult to determine the cost of hosting Syrians in Jordan.

"It goes without saying that it is high, but we cannot say for sure at the moment because Syrians are still fleeing to Jordan," said government spokesman Samih Maayatah.

More than 13,000 people have been killed, most of them civilians, since the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's regime erupted in March last year, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"We did not wonder whether we would get enough water or not in Jordan. We just ran for our lives," said Abu Eid.

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India monsoon misses arrival date
New Delhi (AFP) June 2, 2012 - India's monsoon, crucial to farmers and growth in Asia's third-largest economy, has missed its normal arrival date but forecasters said they were confident the rains would arrive soon.

"Most likely, the southwest monsoon will reach Kerala by June 5," India Meteorological Department director general L.S. Rathore told the Press Trust of India late on Friday.

Normally the rains begin sweeping across the subcontinent from June 1 to late September and in recent years they have started early.

Rathore said "there is no concern" about the delay in the arrival of the monsoon rains that he attributed to unfavourable weather off India's shores in the Arabian Sea.

The weather office in April forecast that the rains would be normal for a third straight year.

Indian agriculture gets 60 percent of its precipitation from the rains and a bad monsoon can spell financial disaster for its 235 million farmers, many of whom are smallholders eking out a living.

While agriculture's share of India's nearly $2-trillion economy has shrunk to around 14 percent from 30 percent in the early 1990s, the rains are still vital to its fortunes.

Rural spending accounts for more than 50 percent of domestic consumption and a failed monsoon hits demand for everything from fridges to cars.

The country suffered a devastating drought in 2009.

The government is banking on a good monsoon to rein in surging food prices that have hit hardest India's hundreds of millions of poor, the ruling Congress party's biggest supporters.

It also needs a good agricultural performance to spur growth after the economy grew by 6.5 percent last year, its slowest pace in nine years.



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New Haven CT (SPX) May 30, 2012
Environmental change is the selective force that preserves adaptive traits in organisms and is a primary driver of evolution. However, it is less well known that evolutionary change in organisms also trigger fundamental changes in the environment. Yale University researchers found a prime example of this evolutionary feedback loop in a few lakes in Connecticut, where dams built 300 years a ... read more


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