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dc.contributor.authorRAHMOUN, Chihab Eddine
dc.date.accessioned2025-12-18T13:00:56Z
dc.date.available2025-12-18T13:00:56Z
dc.date.issued2025-04-17
dc.identifier.citationChihab Eddine RAHMOUN is a dedicated civil engineer and water policy specialist with a Master’s degree in Water Policy from the Pan-African University Institute of Water and Energy Sciences (PAUWES) and a Master’s in Civil Engineering from Abou Bekr Belkaid University. His expertise lies in water resources management, hydrological modeling, and sustainable development strategies, supported by technical proficiency in tools such as WEAP, HEC-HMS, QGIS, and Autodesk Civil 3D.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://repository.pauwes-cop.net/handle/1/504
dc.descriptionThe objective of this study is to utilize the WEAP (Water Evaluation and Planning) model to assess water resource management scenarios in the Oran Coastal Basin. The study quantified the hydrological, economical, and environmental impacts over a 30-year period, extending from 2023 to 2053. The overarching objective is to identify resilient, adaptive strategies for mitigating water deficits, safeguarding ecosystems, and ensuring equitable access to water.en_US
dc.description.abstractThe Oran coastal basin, a semi-arid region in north-western Algeria, is under increasing water pressure due to climate change (rainfall is expected to fall by 10-20% by 2050) and exponential demand for water, particularly from agriculture (70% of abstractions). With a population of 3 million and a demographic growth rate of 1.8% per year, the region already has a structural deficit of 660 million m³ (2023), exacerbated by the over-exploitation of groundwater (-40% since 2000) and losses of 35% in irrigation networks. These challenges call for an urgent overhaul of water management to avert a humanitarian and ecological crisis. Using the WEAP model, this study simulates the evolution of supply-demand imbalances over 30 years (2023-2053), integrating climatic, hydraulic (15 aquifers, 10 desalination plants) and socio-economic data. Of the seven scenarios tested, the most effective combines moderate population growth and sustainable agricultural practices, significantly reducing unmet demand. However, the projections reveal a critical increase in demand (1.89 billion m³ in 2053) and an annual deficit of 2.4 billion m³, exacerbated by the scarcity of rainfall and urban expansion. These results underline the ineffectiveness of supply-side solutions (dams, desalination) in the face of integrated management that prioritises demand. For resilient and equitable management, the study proposes multi-dimensional measures: adoption of technologies (drip irrigation, IoT to reduce losses), progressive pricing with subsidies for vulnerable households, and strengthened governance via basin committees. Social equity is central, requiring priority access to water in rural areas and awareness-raising campaigns. Aligned with MDG 6, these recommendations provide an operational framework for decision-makers, although their implementation depends on up-to-date data and a lasting political commitment. This work illustrates the urgent need for a transition to adaptive management in arid regions, where water remains a matter of survival and justice.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherRAHMOUN Chihab Eddineen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesWater Policy;Cohort 9
dc.subjectIntegrated water resource management (IWRM), Oran coastal basin (Algeria), WEAP (Water Evaluation and Planning) modelling, Water stress.en_US
dc.titleEVALUATION OF WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT SCENARIOS USING THE WEAPen_US
dc.typeMaster Thesisen_US


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