MOROCCO: Redi project to rehabilitate irrigation systems in 3 regions

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MOROCCO: Redi project to rehabilitate irrigation systems in 3 regions©Sergei25/Shutterstock

In Morocco, the Resilience and Sustainability of Irrigation Water (REDI) project is underway. The Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture, Maritime Fisheries, Rural Development and Water and Forests, which is implementing the project, is announcing the modernization of irrigation systems in three regions in response to water stress.

The Resilience and Sustainability of Irrigation Water (REDI) project was presented on January 20, 2022 by the Moroccan Ministry of Agriculture, Maritime Fisheries, Rural Development and Water and Forests. The project aims to rationalize the use of water resources through modern irrigation systems. According to the United Nations (UN), Morocco is already considered to be under water stress with only 500 m3 of fresh water per capita per year, compared to 2,500 m3 in 1960 and the situation is expected to worsen.

According to the government, the irrigation project will cover the regions of Tadla, Casablanca-Settat and Souss-Massa. The aim is to strengthen water management in the agricultural sector, reinforce irrigation and drainage services, and improve access to advisory services and plot-based irrigation technologies.

World Bank Funding

In the Talda region of central Morocco, the Redi project will build new pressurized irrigation networks to replace existing open ones. A water conveyance canal in the Talda area will also be upgraded.

In Chtouka, in the Casablanca-Settat region, the Redi project will install water meters on 9,000 boreholes for better management of the water table. A private partner will be hired, via a management contract, to install this equipment as well as supervise water withdrawals, according to the Moroccan authorities.

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In Souss-Massa, the Moroccan government plans to renovate the main pumping station (SP1), rehabilitate the main canal, renovate the distribution networks and renew the irrigation hydrants in the sectors not yet equipped. The government hopes to improve the irrigation of a total area of over 18,000 hectares.

The World Bank will finance all the work in the three regions benefiting from the Irrigation Water Resilience and Sustainability Project, in accordance with an agreement signed with the Moroccan government.

Inès Magoum

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