Saturday, August 15, 2009

Well Water













I logged a partial victory today, mostly due to external forces, but it’s going in the V column anyway.

An interesting cocktail – it has elements of hydrogeology, meteorology, sociology, economics, local politics and spirituality.

First, the spirituality part: Yemenis, and in my experience, most Arabic-speaking Muslims invoke the term “inshallah” about once every three sentences. “If God wills it” is the translation. Muslims are big on explicit and visible expressions of deference and devotion to Allah – head coverings, five lengthy prayer sessions per day, etc. I have noticed that the Yemenis who are comfortable enough to talk about religion with you are not particularly interested in converting you, so much as making you aware that Allah is the one true god (to the exclusion of whatever screwed up faith you may have going.) Anyway, one downside of the constant reinforcement of God’s absolute control can be a laissez faire attitude towards personal improvement, or even maintenance of what you already have. You don’t really have to worry about it. What’s the point? God provides. God is ubiquitous and omnipotent (chant ten times while clanging head against pavement). It's Marx's opiate of the masses on steriods

Hold that thought as we move on to the weather. I have been in Yemen since October 13, 2007. During that time, it has rained exactly once. I remember it well – October 25, 2008. It rained about an inch or two here at the project site, and somewhat more in mountainous part of the watershed. The Wadis (ephemeral creek beds) filled up and flooded the worksite briefly. Luckily all the project drainage is designed for 100 year storms so it was only a brief hiccup for the expat companies (although many of the Yemeni subcontractors parked their vehicles and equipment in the Wadis, and there was a fair amount of damage.) The sparse rainfall – eg, once every couple of years – means that recharge to the groundwater aquifer is meager, and unlimited pumping from water wells is not a god-given providence.

Regarding water distribution: Yemgas operates a reverse osmosis plant which de-salts seawater for domestic usage – showers, cooking, cleaning, etc. Yemgas provides this domestic water via a metered distribution (pipe) network to the Subcontractor camps and backcharges the cost to cover its operational overhead. (drinking water is a separate issue – it is provided by vendors who truck in bottled water from commercial treatment plants). The Subcontractors learned early on that they could obtain domestic water more cheaply by filling vacuum trucks from the water wells at the local villages. This is what we environmental types refer to as an indirect impact.

I started the battle as soon as I arrived, trying to get the Subcontractors to quit sucking water from the village wells. There were several obstacles: at times, the RO plant was undependable and we could not always meet all of the domestic water needs. This was compounded by a huge demand for water during commissioning of the boilers and hydrostatic testing of pipe runs. Also, the villagers got used to the fees paid for the water pumped by the Subcontractors, and they resisted efforts to curtail pumping (ie, they pleaded with management). If the village sheiks thought about it at all – a stretch – the spectre of aquifer depletion was likely deferred to the highest authority.

The status as of Week 32: boiler commissioning completed, desalination plant commissioned (which satisfies all of the industrial water needs), the RO plant was throttled back to half production capacity when the storage tanks started overflowing. I was not looking forward to the struggle, but I could no longer in good conscience allow unrestricted pumping of aquifer water. Then it happened. Earlier today, some idiot at the Al Juairy village got angry at one of the Subcontractor tank truck drivers and decided to resolve the matter with an AK-47. Shots were fired, but luckily nobody was hurt. The ripple effect was immediate; all of the tanker drivers have refused to drive to the wells, and the ROP plant is back to operating at full capacity. Problem solved without a struggle.

The village idiot will suffer significant consequences once the sheik finds out that his only revenue source has dried up, so to speak. Not just Al Juairy, but all of the 6 or 7 villages that derived income from selling well water.

This episode reinforced a couple of principles that I hold dear:

1. The power of Adams Smith’s ubiquitous and omnipotent hand. In this case it is too little too late, but my guess is that in future dealings, the village idiot (if he is still with us), and all other idiots-in-training in Al-Juairy and surrounding area, with think twice about mixing firearms with business.

2. This village idiot dynamic is the model that I was alluding to in an earlier posting re: dealing with Arab terrorists: these guys live and interact with, and are related to regular people. As long as the regular people do not feel alienated from the west, or better, if they feel like they share something in common, they will offer a calming influence, and even a police restraint on many, not all, of the wackos in their midsts. The Bush Administration did their best to alienate regular people. As a result, in Iraq and elsewhere there is little first line deterrence of the type that is ongoing in Al Juairy tonight.


1 comment:

mle54 said...

Okay, so I'm months late and have no idea what's going on in your life . . . but WHERE ARE YOU when I want to talk to you?