environment in lebanon: status and way forward ricardo khoury environmental consultant, elard city...

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Environment in Lebanon:Status and Way Forward

Environment in Lebanon:Status and Way Forward

Ricardo KhouryEnvironmental Consultant, ELARD

City Café – Beirut, Lebanon

April 5, 2007

2

Objectives

• Describe key environmental concerns in Lebanon

• Explain how government is addressing these concerns

• Discuss means for civic society and scientists to push forward the environmental agenda

3

Environmental Concerns

• Solid Waste• Wastewater• Water• Air quality• Climate change• Environmental impacts from July 2006 war

Sources of pollution

Sinks of pollution

Effect of pollution

4

Solid Waste

• MSW Generation (2001 estimate): 1.44 million tons/year

• Equivalent to 0.92 kg/capita/day

9%

3%

5%

2%

3%

10%17%

51%63%

7%

5%

4%

3%

18%

Organic

Paper and Cardboard

Plastic

Glass

Textiles

Metals

Construction/ demolition

Other

GBA National

Source: MoE/Ecodit

5

Solid Waste (2)

Source: MoE

6

Solid Waste (3)

Greater Beirut and Mount Lebanon

Zahle (50%)

TripoliControlled Waste Disposal Areas

7

Solid Waste (4)

• Recent Initiatives– USAID Program (2003-2007) (15 mUSD)– EU / OMSAR Program (on-going) (10.5 mEURO)

• Support to Unions of Municipalities and municipalities in solid waste management

8

Solid Waste (5)

• A draft Law for Integrated Solid Waste Management was prepared by MoE (2005) and is ready for adoption

• Lack of long-term planning in this sector is a major hindrance to its improvement

• Political interference is another major obstacle

9

Wastewater

• Lebanon generates about 250 million m3 of wastewater per year

• Almost the totality of this wastewater is directly discharged in the sea, rivers, valleys or land

10

Wastewater (2)

Akkar (2)

Tripoli (5)

Koura (1)

Batroun (4)

Jbeil (5)

Beirut (7)

Kesrouan (6)

Baabda (3)

Aley (1)

Metn (7)

Chouf (3)

Saida (6)

Sour (3)

Source: CDR/LACECO, 2000c

Mediterranean Sea

11

Wastewater (3)

• The GoL initiated the construction of seven wastewater treatment plants in 2001: Saida, Chekka, Batroun, Jbeil, Chouf coastal area, Baalbeck and Nabatiyeh

• None is yet operational

• Several municipalities have or are finding their own solutions with support of international agencies (such as USAID)

12

Water

• Lebanon has 40 major streams and rivers with 17 perennial rivers and more than 2000 springs

• Water quality data issparse and not enoughto assess severity ofwater pollution

13

Water (2)

• Of the 10 stations monitored by the National Center for Marine Sciences (NCMS) only one station was deemed fit for swimming based on concentration of fecal coliforms(SOER, 2001)

14

Water (3)

• Surface water also suffers from pollution

15

Water (4)

• Seawater intrusion

16

Water (5)

• Limited progress in solid waste and wastewater management does not help alleviate impacts on water resources

• Limited control on industrial and agricultural discharges

• No systematic monitoring of quality of water resources

17

Air Quality & Climate Change

• Main sources of air pollution:– Transport– Power plants– Industries

52.43.1

54.2

476.4361.2

83.0

0

500

CO2 CH4 N20 NOx CO NMVOC SO2

Air

po

llut

ion

load

s (k

tonn

es)

13,000

Greenhouse Gases

18

Air Quality & Climate Change (2)

• Limited monitoring of ambient air quality• MoE developed a draft Law for the

Protection of Air Quality (2005) – yet to be adopted

• No strategy for air quality protection available

Average166 mg/m3

USEPA24-hr standard

Lebanese 24-hr standard

TS

P,

µg/

m3

19

Air Quality & Climate Change (3)

• Climate change– Lebanon signed the Kyoto Protocol– Eligible to participate in Clean Development

Mechanism (CDM)– Is in the process of selecting a Designated

National Authority (DNA)

20

Environmental Impacts from War

21

The Oil Spill

• Up to 15,000 m3 of heavy fuel oil spilled in the Mediterranean Sea

•150 km of coast affected by the oil spill

• Palm Island Nature Reserve (Protected Area) polluted

22

Impacts from Reconstruction

• 445,000 m2 of road network, 92 bridges, and 130,000 dwelling units (HRC)

• 2.5 to 3 million m3 of construction and demolition wastes

• Inadequate waste management affecting water courses, biodiversity and coastal zone

• Demand for natural resources (sand and aggregates) has doubled to meet reconstruction needs

• Average dust concentration could increase by a factor 5 in areas close to heavy construction activities

23

Other Environmental Impacts (1)

24

Other Environmental Impacts (2)

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