Abstract

Water availability plays an important role in the expansion planning of utility-scale solar power plants, especially in the arid regions of the Middle East and North Africa. Although these power plants usually account for only a small fraction of local water demand, competition for water resources between communities, farmers, companies, and power suppliers is already emerging and is likely to intensify in future. Despite this, to date there has been a lack of comprehensive studies analyzing interdependencies and potential conflicts between energy and water at local level. This study addresses this research gap and examines the linkages between water resources and energy technologies at local level based on a case study conducted in Ouarzazate, Morocco, where one of the largest solar power complexes in the world was recently completed. To better understand the challenges faced by the region in light of increased water demand and diminishing water supply, a mixed-method research design was applied to integrate the knowledge of local stakeholders through a series of workshops. In a first step, regional socio-economic water demand scenarios were developed and, in a second step, water saving measures to avoid critical development pathways were systematically evaluated using a participatory multi-criteria evaluation approach. The results are a set of water demand scenarios for the region and a preferential ranking of water saving measures that could be drawn upon to support decision-making relating to energy and water development in the region.

Highlights

  • Water is becoming an increasingly scarce resource

  • A system map allows the whole picture to be seen and for key factors that are likely to influence the future development of the local water demand to be identified [34,35]

  • As illustrated in the system map, water in the Middle Drâa Valley is mainly drawn from the El Mansour Eddahbi reservoir

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Summary

Introduction

Water is becoming an increasingly scarce resource This can affect the development of all sectors, including the energy sector, while at the same time the energy sector and other sectors can contribute to intensifying water stress in certain regions [1]. Thermal technologies like Concentrating Solar Power (CSP) can require significant amounts of water, depending on the cooling technology applied [4,5]. This leads to the dichotomy that in arid regions, which are generally those regions with the highest solar energy potential, water can potentially become a limiting factor for the expansion of solar technology

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