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?Switch to solar, save water?

Power generation from solar PV is clean and requires zero or little water use. (Image source: Gregroose/sxc.hu)

?Thirsty? Middle East and North African (MENA) countries could tap into their solar energy potential to cope with fresh water scarcity, according to resource experts

Water could be saved by switching to renewable solar energy from fossil fuel electricity generation that uses up water, said the World Resources Institute (WRI).

The findings show moving to clean energy has benefits aside from cutting planet-warming greenhouse gas emissions, said Tianyi Luo, a senior WRI manager.

?A lot of times, the water savings, that kind of benefits from renewable projects are overlooked,? Luo told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Oman, Libya, Algeria, Morocco and Jordan ranked among the top countries, measured by lack of freshwater and solar energy potential that could benefit from such a switch, the report added.

?These countries have high average resources for both solar and wind that could be put to very productive uses, and it could potentially assist them in their water-related challenges,? said Jordan Macknick, energy and water analyst at the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

Fresh and sea water is often used in the process of cooling fossil fuel power plants, ubiquitous in the MENA, according to the World Bank.

Powering one 60W incandescent light bulb for 12 hours over one a year can consume up to 22,713 litres of water, according to the USA-based Virginia Water Resources Research Center.

Solar panels, meanwhile, require little or no water to install and maintain.

Yemen, an impoverished nation in the grip of civil war, topped the WRI ranking in terms of water scarcity and how much potential electricity solar farms could produce.

Saudi Arabia, the world?s top oil exporter, ranked third.

Despite its wealth of oil, the kingdom recently stepped up its involvement in expanding solar energy with an announcement in March of investments to create the world?s biggest solar power project.

The project is expected to have the capacity to produce up to 200 GW by 2030.