Featured

DEWA Completes Stage-1 Of Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) Project

DEWA Completes Stage-1 Of Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) Project

STANDFIRST: The state-owned Dubai Electricity and Water Authority (Dewa) has completed the construction of the first stage of the Aquifer Storage and Recovery (ASR) project for desalinated water and has started the operations and testing stage.

The full scale of the ASR project can store up to 6,000 million imperial gallons (MIG) of water once completed by 2025 as a strategic reserve. This makes it the largest ASR of its kind in the world to store potable water and retrieve it in case of an emergency.

This will also secure the Emirate with an additional source of potable water strategic reserve of 50 MIGD for 90 days in emergencies, while ensuring the quality of the stored water.

DEWA’s Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Saeed Mohammed Al Tayer said that the new project supports their efforts to increase the storage capacity of Dubai to reach 7212 MIG in 2025 when compared with the present storage capacity of 822 MIG.

“We support the vision of His highness Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President, Prime Minister and Ruler of Dubai, to provide a state-of-the-art, integrated, and resilient infrastructure of electricity and water in Dubai according to the highest standards of availability, reliability, efficiency and safety,” he said.

Meets Growing Demand

According to him, this will help to ensure meeting the rapidly growing demand for water across different areas in Dubai for all citizens, residents and visitors. Besides the ASR project, DEWA is also developing a 120 MIG reservoir in Al Nakhali and another 60 MIG reservoir in Al Lusaily.

The ASR project increases the sustainable production of water in Dubai. It uses clean solar power to desalinate seawater using the latest Reverse Osmosis (RO) technologies. Excess water is stored in aquifers and pumped back into the water network when needed.

The cost of this innovative integrated model is less than the cost of traditional reservoirs, and is a sustainable, eco-friendly, economical solution. It also emphasises Dubai’s ability to anticipate and shape the future.

The production capacity of desalinated water of DEWA is currently 490 MIGD, including 63MIGD using Sea Water Reverse Osmosis (SWRO) technology. By 2030, SWRO will help expand its production capacity to 303 MIGD, increasing it to 730 MIGD of desalinated water by 2030.

Global Business Magazine

Recent Posts

IMF Staff Reaches Staff-Level Agreement on the Third Review under the Policy Coordination Instrument with Serbia

End-of-Mission press releases present IMF staff’s preliminary findings following a visit to a country. The…

4 hours ago

Dubai homeowners now holding as long as Londoners and New Yorkers

New fäm Properties analysis of more than 1.1 million Dubai Land Department transactions shows clear…

5 hours ago

IMF Staff Completes Governance and Corruption Diagnostic Mission to Nepal

Washington, DC – May 7, 2026: At the request of the Government of Nepal, an IMF…

5 hours ago

UAE Capital Markets Are Becoming a Beacon for Foreign Investments!

The UAE’s capital markets are no longer a subplot, but rather the protagonist of the…

20 hours ago

$1 billion satellite network planned by an Abu Dhabi-based space company

Abu Dhabi Fund for Development (ADFD) and Orbitworks are collaborating for the advancement of digital…

2 days ago

IMF Staff Completes the 2026 Article IV and Programs Review Mission to the Democratic Republic of Congo

End-of-Mission press releases include statements of IMF staff teams that convey preliminary findings after a…

3 days ago