Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08ALGIERS1067
2008-10-05 14:04:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Algiers
Cable title:  

WATER: SECURITY THAT OIL CANNOT BUY

Tags:  ECON EAGR ETRD PGOV AG 
pdf how-to read a cable
VZCZCXRO8709
PP RUEHTRO
DE RUEHAS #1067/01 2791404
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 051404Z OCT 08
FM AMEMBASSY ALGIERS
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 6437
INFO RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS 2877
RUEHMD/AMEMBASSY MADRID 9047
RUEHRB/AMEMBASSY RABAT 2519
RUEHTU/AMEMBASSY TUNIS 7371
RUEHTRO/AMEMBASSY TRIPOLI
RUEHNK/AMEMBASSY NOUAKCHOTT 6514
RUEHNM/AMEMBASSY NIAMEY 1723
RUEHBP/AMEMBASSY BAMAKO 0706
RUEHCL/AMCONSUL CASABLANCA 3536
RHMFISS/HQ USEUCOM VAIHINGEN GE
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ALGIERS 001067 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/30/2018
TAGS: ECON EAGR ETRD PGOV AG
SUBJECT: WATER: SECURITY THAT OIL CANNOT BUY

Classified By: Ambassador David D. Pearce; reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 ALGIERS 001067

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 09/30/2018
TAGS: ECON EAGR ETRD PGOV AG
SUBJECT: WATER: SECURITY THAT OIL CANNOT BUY

Classified By: Ambassador David D. Pearce; reasons 1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (SBU) SUMMARY: Algeria faces urgent challenges in
managing its water resources and huge opportunities exist for
U.S. companies in the sector, Minister of Water Resources
Abdelmalek Sellal told the Ambassador on September 29.
Sellal said he was satisfied with equipment, such as pumps,
purchased from U.S. companies, but wanted to see more
involvement in planning, construction and technical
assistance, and his ministry was willing to accommodate
various business partnership, joint venture or grouping
arrangements to ensure that U.S. expertise was brought to
bear on Algeria's water sector. Algeria's water strategy
focuses on desalination for the coastal cities, medium-sized
dams to irrigate the inland mountains and high plateau, and
an ambitious 800km water transfer project to bring water to
the deep Saharan south. END SUMMARY.

URBANIZATION BRINGS SUPPLY CONCERNS
--------------


2. (C) Sellal, a former interior minister, explained how the
civil war of the 1990s emptied out large swaths of rural
Algeria, causing inhabitants to flee to the cities. This, he
said, created a squeeze on a colonial-era urban water
infrastructure that already needed modernization. In
addition, he blamed terrorists for exacerbating the supply
problem by destroying many water transportation and
electrical lines. Hence, Sellal's major challenge for the
cities was to modernize the water infrastructure while at the
same time pumping more water to the population.


3. (C) The Algerian strategy for the coastal cities was based
heavily on desalination, Sellal said, since over the last 25
years Algeria has received less snow and rain over time.
According to Sellal, desalination currently provides 25
million cubic meters of potable consumption, and some 800
million cubic meters per year. He described 12 desalination
plants currently operating, with two in the Tlemcen region,
one in Beni Saf to supply Ain Temouchent, two in Oran, one in
Mostaganem, one in Algiers (the Hamma plant built by General
Electric/Ionics),one in Tenes, one in Cherchell, one at Cap

Djinet to serve Tizi Ouzou, one in Skikda for the industrial
zone there, and one in Annaba. Sellal said that Algeria will
add three more, and that an Oran plant currently under
construction will process up to 500,000 cubic meters per day.
Desalination, Sellal asserted, has become cost effective,
costing only some 80 cents per cubic meter of water.

AS GOES THE HIGH PLATEAU, SO GOES ALGERIA
--------------


4. (C) Sellal then focused on the high plateau, the inland
zone across the entire country between the coastal mountain
ranges and the Sahara. The development of Algeria, he said,
depends on the development of the high plateau. For this
region, Algeria relies on medium-sized dams, adding pipelines
to bring water from the coast and from Saharan aquifiers to
the region. Sixty-five percent of this water is for
agricultural development, Sellal said. The majority of
Algeria's Saharan water is drawn from two aquifers at Ain
Salah -- one, a deep, vast, warm water aquifer stretching
across the Sahara into Libya, and another cooler deposit
closer to the surface. Through what Sellal called a
"gentlemen's agreement," Algeria shared the deeper, warmer
aquifer with Libya, and he suggested that Libya's Colonel
Muammar Qadhafi was pumping more than his share of it.
Sellal stated that the higher of the two aquifers was more
critical to Algeria's security, since it was that one that
supplied the Algerian Sahel, though an 800km pipeline to
Tamanrasset.

BRING IN THE AMERICANS...
--------------


5. (SBU) Sellal repeatedly lamented what he viewed as the
apparent decision of U.S. companies to focus primarily on
selling equipment to Algeria rather than on the significant
infrastructure and technological projects vital to Algerian
national security. He referred to Canadian firm SNC Lavalin
as one example of a foreign company that had put in some 15
years of work on the ground in Algeria, building dams and
hydroelectric projects in the coastal mountains. Sellal said

ALGIERS 00001067 002.2 OF 002


that Algeria welcomed U.S. expertise in studies and
evaluation, technical assistance and construction, and
suggested that Algeria would be flexible to accommodate
whatever sort of business arrangements would make U.S.
companies comfortable. (Note: U.S. companies traditionally
have had difficulty making inroads into this sector due to
the relative expense of U.S. solutions and equipment pricing
them out of the market. End note.) He mentioned joint
ventures and groupings with other companies on the ground for
cheaper labor as two examples, citing Chinese companies as
one possible partner in a grouping with Algerian interests.
Sellal was emphatic in debunking what he saw as the myth that
the Algerian market was "somehow reserved for Europeans,"
describing a world in which U.S, Chinese and Russian centers
of power all needed reassessment.

...ONCE I GET BACK FROM IRAN
--------------


6. (C) Sellal confided that he was planning to travel to Iran
in three weeks to discuss cooperation on dam construction.
He said the Iranians "want to come and help us" but he was
cautious, believing Iranians to be "dangerous" people who
"always hold a secret, so you will never know the truth with
them."

COMMENT: A THIRST FOR ENGAGEMENT
--------------


7. (C) Sellal is an experienced minister and long-standing
regime insider, having held several ministerial posts dating
back to the presidency of Liamine Zeroual in the late 1990s.
He is considered by many to be on a second-tier list of
"presidentiables," possible successors to President
Bouteflika. Drawing on his ministerial experience as well as
his late 1970s tenure as wali (governor) of Tamanrasset, he
proved extremely knowledgable on Algerian security issues and
their interplay with resource allocation challenges. Sellal
was eager for further engagement with the U.S. and we will
look to upcoming visits and initiatives to follow-up with him
and his ministry. Sellal, a former governor in the south,
also provided a fascinating insight into the politics of
Algeria's Sahelian Tuareg population (septel).
PEARCE