+100% في عام واحد.. ارتفاع قياسي في مخزون سدود المغرب ونسبة الملء تتجاوز 75%

Official figures: Moroccan dams are recovering and filling rates are doubling

Official data revealed byMinistry of Equipment and WaterToday, Saturday, he announced a remarkable improvement in the water situation in the Kingdom, as the total filling rate of dams reached 65.23 percent, with an injection exceeding 10.9 billion cubic meters, compared to only 27.71 percent during the same period last year.

The Bouregreg Basin recorded among the highest filling rates nationally, reaching 92.2 percent, with a total reserve of approximately 998.6 million cubic metres, supported by the positive performance of the Sidi Mohammed Ben Abdullah Dam, whose filling rate reached 94 percent.

In turn, the Locos Basin achieved important water results, with a total filling rate of 89.3 percent, with a water reserve estimated at approximately 1,706.6 million cubic metres. The data showed that three dams had reached their maximum capacity of 100 percent, namely the Wadi Al-Makhzen, Chefchaouen, and Nakhla dams, while other dams were close to being completely filled, compared to the continued weak filling of the Jumaa Dam, which did not exceed 19 percent.

As for the Sebou Basin, it also recorded a strong water performance, with a total reserve of about 4,707.2 million cubic metres, meaning a filling rate of 84.7 percent. Four dams in the basin reached full capacity, at a time when the filling rate in Al-Wahda Dam, the largest dam in the Kingdom, reached about 88 percent, with an injection exceeding 3 billion cubic metres.

In the Tensift Basin, the total filling rate reached 82.1 percent, with a reserve of approximately 186.6 million cubic metres, where the Abi Abbas Sabti Dam recorded a filling rate of approximately 98 percent, followed by the Moulay Abderrahmane Dam at 96 percent.

Regarding the Ker-Ziz-Gris Basin, the filling rate reached 59.3 percent, with a reserve estimated at 318.8 million cubic metres, as the Hassan al-Dakhel Dam recorded a filling rate of 76 percent, compared to 35 percent with the Qudusa Dam.

The data also showed that the Souss-Massa basin reached a total filling rate of 53.9 percent, with a reserve of 394.7 million cubic metres. The Uluz Dam topped the list of dams in the basin after reaching its full capacity, while the Yusuf Bin Tashfin Dam, one of the largest dams in the region, recorded a filling rate of around 48 percent.

At the level of the Moulouya Basin, the water situation recorded a noticeable improvement, with a filling rate of 52.6 percent, with a total reserve of approximately 377.5 million cubic metres, with the full filling of a dam on Oued Ezza, in contrast to the continued weakness of the reserve in the Hassan II and Injil dams.

As for the Oum Er Rbia Basin, its total filling rate reached 38.3 percent, with an injection estimated at approximately 1,901 million cubic metres, as the Sidi Idriss Dam recorded complete filling, while the situation remained worrying with the Massira Dam, whose filling rate did not exceed 17 percent.

As for the Draa-Oued Noun Basin, the total filling rate reached 32.7 percent, with a reserve of approximately 343.4 million cubic metres, with the Agdez Dam topping the list of dams in the basin with a filling rate of 42 percent.

This relative improvement in dam reserves reflects the positive impact of recent rainfall, which would reduce water stress, with the continued need to rationalize the use of water resources and enhance their sustainable management.

Source:My press

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