Jordan faces an archetypal combination of high water scarcity, with a per capita water availability of around 150 m3 per year significantly below the absolute scarcity threshold of 500 m3, and strong population growth, especially due to the Syrian refugee crisis. A transition to more sustainable water consumption patterns will likely require Jordan’s water authorities to rely more strongly on water demand management in the future. We conduct a case study of the effects of pricing policies, using an agent-based model of household water consumption in Jordan’s capital Amman, in order to analyze the distribution of burdens imposed by demand-side policies across society. Amman’s households face highly intermittent piped water supply, leading th...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and s...
Jordan ranked as one of the world’s poorest countries in terms of water availability. In the face of...
The scarcity of water—in both quantity and quality—is a problem not just in poor countries, but also...
Jordan faces an archetypal combination of high water scarcity, with a per capita water availability ...
The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan is confronted with a severe freshwater crisis shaped by excess water...
In view of population growth; climate change; and economic evolution, water resources in numerous pa...
Arid developing countries face growing challenges from water scarcity, which are exacerbated by defi...
Arid developing countries face growing challenges from water scarcity, which are exacerbated by defi...
One of the distinctive characteristics of the water supply system of Greater Amman, the capital of J...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Jordan’s Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI) characterizes the country as suffering from severe w...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and ...
Water shortages from intermittent public supplies are a major and expanding problem in the Hashemite...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and ...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and s...
Jordan ranked as one of the world’s poorest countries in terms of water availability. In the face of...
The scarcity of water—in both quantity and quality—is a problem not just in poor countries, but also...
Jordan faces an archetypal combination of high water scarcity, with a per capita water availability ...
The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan is confronted with a severe freshwater crisis shaped by excess water...
In view of population growth; climate change; and economic evolution, water resources in numerous pa...
Arid developing countries face growing challenges from water scarcity, which are exacerbated by defi...
Arid developing countries face growing challenges from water scarcity, which are exacerbated by defi...
One of the distinctive characteristics of the water supply system of Greater Amman, the capital of J...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Over the last two decades, Jordan has suffered a chronic water crisis, and is the tenth most water-s...
Jordan’s Ministry of Water and Irrigation (MWI) characterizes the country as suffering from severe w...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and ...
Water shortages from intermittent public supplies are a major and expanding problem in the Hashemite...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and ...
Jordan faces great internal water scarcity and pollution, conflict over trans-boundary waters, and s...
Jordan ranked as one of the world’s poorest countries in terms of water availability. In the face of...
The scarcity of water—in both quantity and quality—is a problem not just in poor countries, but also...