Wastewater Reuse for Irrigation Agriculture in Morocco: Influence of Regulation on Feasible Implementation
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Wastewater reuse Irrigation agriculture International quality standards Regulation improvement Tertiary treatment Natural resources degradation Morocco
Date
2022-12-16Referencia bibliográfica
Ortega-Pozo, J.L... [et al.]. Wastewater Reuse for Irrigation Agriculture in Morocco: Influence of Regulation on Feasible Implementation. Land 2022, 11, 2312. [https://doi.org/10.3390/land11122312]
Abstract
Morocco is a water-scarce developing country with a growing marketable agro-food
industry, where untreated or insufficiently treated wastewater represents less than 1% of the irrigation
water and treated wastewater reuse is virtually nil. The Government of Morocco is planning to
increase the volume of treated wastewater reuse for irrigation agriculture under the current permissive
regulation to alleviate the pressure on conventional water sources. However, the reuse of insufficiently
treated wastewater implies environmental and human health risks besides the degradation of land
and renewable natural resources. This paper shows the feasibility of increasing wastewater reuse
for irrigation agriculture in Morocco and how the existing permissive regulation must be improved
to force more efficient technologies aimed at ensuring the export of agricultural goods to the most
restrictive international markets. The results show how the quality standards of Moroccan regulation
are below that of their equivalents in developed countries, as well as in most of the consulted
developing countries. After verifying that tertiary treatment is financially feasible, the updated
regulation must also consider climatic water scarcity and the locally low cultural perception of
environmental and human health risks in order to design optimal solutions.