In 2011 Amman used 16.4% (148 million m3) of the country’s water resources due to its population and industry. Internal sources supplied only 38 million m3 while external sources provided 110 million m3 (fig. X.6). Until the 1950s, the city was famous for its Sayl river and its tributaries, whose plentiful source flowed at a rate of 100 m3/h. In 1975, Jordan had a population of about 2 million, including 600,000 in the city of Amman alone. The demographic and economic pressures on water reso..
Despite water’s seeming abundance, water scarcity affects residents on every continent. In fact, the...
Jordan’s Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI) characterizes the country as suffering from severe w...
Abstract Jordan is considered one of the countries in the world with the scarcest of water resources...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Broad economic development and high demographic growth during the second half of the 20th century ha...
ABSTRACT Jordan is a middle-income country with a per capita income of $ 1.666 and a population of ...
One of the distinctive characteristics of the water supply system of Greater Amman, the capital of J...
Jordan ranked as one of the world’s poorest countries in terms of water availability. In the face of...
Jordan is located in the Middle East in the eastern Mediterranean. It has a surface area of approxim...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
Long before the discovery of oil, the most valuable resource to the inhabitants of the Middle East w...
The Jordan Rift Valley is a crucial natural and geo-political artery of the Middle-East. From ancien...
Over the past 90 years Amman’s population has increased approximately 400 times from 5,000 inhabitan...
Jordan faces an archetypal combination of high water scarcity, with a per capita water availability ...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
Despite water’s seeming abundance, water scarcity affects residents on every continent. In fact, the...
Jordan’s Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI) characterizes the country as suffering from severe w...
Abstract Jordan is considered one of the countries in the world with the scarcest of water resources...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Broad economic development and high demographic growth during the second half of the 20th century ha...
ABSTRACT Jordan is a middle-income country with a per capita income of $ 1.666 and a population of ...
One of the distinctive characteristics of the water supply system of Greater Amman, the capital of J...
Jordan ranked as one of the world’s poorest countries in terms of water availability. In the face of...
Jordan is located in the Middle East in the eastern Mediterranean. It has a surface area of approxim...
Jordan is often held up as one of the most water scarce countries in the world. The water scarcity i...
Long before the discovery of oil, the most valuable resource to the inhabitants of the Middle East w...
The Jordan Rift Valley is a crucial natural and geo-political artery of the Middle-East. From ancien...
Over the past 90 years Amman’s population has increased approximately 400 times from 5,000 inhabitan...
Jordan faces an archetypal combination of high water scarcity, with a per capita water availability ...
The watershed of the Jordan River stretches over four countries – Jordan, Syria, Israel, and Lebanon...
Despite water’s seeming abundance, water scarcity affects residents on every continent. In fact, the...
Jordan’s Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI) characterizes the country as suffering from severe w...
Abstract Jordan is considered one of the countries in the world with the scarcest of water resources...