Skip to content Skip to Search
Skip navigation

Droughts could cost Tunisia $1bn annually

A woman collects water from a well in Tunis. Tunisia is having to operate a quota system for tap water Reuters/Jihed Abidellaoui
A woman collects water from a well in Tunis. Tunisia is having to operate a quota system for tap water
  • Sixth year of low rainfall
  • Dams report 20% loss
  • Olive yields under threat

Water shortages in Tunisia could cost the North African country up to $1.3 billion annually by 2030, according to a report from the World Bank.

For the sixth year in a row, below-average rainfall impacted the country’s agricultural production. The sector’s value fell 9 percent in real terms in the first half of this year compared to a year ago.

By 2050, overall water resources per person per year could decrease by up to 66 percent, fuelled by the climate crisis.

Under the current trends in water demand, the reductions in supply are projected to result in 28 percent of the demand being unmet by that time.

“The economic and social impacts of future water shortages are going to be very significant,” the report said.

The World Bank projects that yields for olives, which accounted for 40 percent of total agricultural exports in 2019, could drop by as much as 69 percent by 2050.

Overall, agricultural production is expected to drop by between 29 percent and 33 percent relative to projections under a scenario of no climatic stress. 

These losses would translate into a reduction in real GDP by between 4.1 and 4.6 percent, according to World Bank projections. 

“A large portion of these losses could materialise by 2030, when the economy is predicted to be between 2.0 and 2.7 smaller than it would otherwise be without the dry conditions induced by climate change,” the Bank said.

This works out at between TD2.7 billion and TD3.8 billion ($0.9 billion and $1.3 billion) per year, the report added.

In September Tunisia’s Agriculture Ministry extended its quota system for tap water, with a ban on its use for agriculture “until further notice”.

Tunisian dams reported a 20.3 percent drop in water stored on August 24, falling to 694 million cubic metres, according to the National Agricultural Observatory. This compared to an average of 871 million cubic metres over the last three years.

Tunisia’s economy is forecast to grow around 1.2 percent this year and 3 percent in 2024, although this is subject to “risks created by the evolution of the drought, the financing conditions and the pace of reforms”, the Bank report said.

Latest articles

PIF's Starbucks shareholdings were cut almost by half from 6.3 million shares to 3.8 million

PIF slashes Starbucks stake as it cuts US stocks by $15bn

Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) has slashed its US equity holdings by 42 percent to $20.6 billion, including its stake in Starbucks, the global coffee chain that has suffered calls for a boycott as a result of the Gaza conflict. The latest US government data highlights funding challenges facing the Saudi giga-projects.  The filing […]

Tunisia olives

Soaring olive oil exports help Tunisia balance books

Tunisia’s soaring olive oil exports have almost doubled to close to $1 billion in just five months, helping it claw back its current account deficit.   However the increased revenues merely “paint over the cracks” and the country is still probably heading towards a sovereign default, according to an economic expert. Tunisia’s current account deficit narrowed […]

Iraqi prime minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani attends licensing rounds for 29 oil and gas exploration blocks at the oil ministry's headquarters in Baghdad

Falling oil prices deepen Iraq’s fiscal imbalances, says IMF

Iraq’s fiscal imbalances have worsened due to significant fiscal expansion and lower oil prices, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). “The ongoing fiscal expansion is expected to boost growth in 2024 at the expense of a further deterioration of fiscal and external accounts and Iraq’s vulnerability to oil price fluctuations,” the Washington-based fund said in […]

Saudi aluminium producer Talco is offering 12 million shares

Aluminium producer Talco announces Saudi IPO

Aluminium producer Al Taiseer Group Talco Industrial Company (Talco) is the latest entity to reveal initial public offering (IPO) plans in Saudi Arabia. The Riyadh-based company, which was set up in 2009, is offering 12 million shares, a 30 percent stake, on the Saudi Exchange (Tadawul) at a nominal value of SAR10 ($2.67) per share. […]