Reliable access to water is a major challenge in Lebanon’s capital city and the Greater Beirut area. The Government of Lebanon has proposed to construct a dam in the Bisri valley to create a reservoir that will feed drinking water to the population of Greater Beirut. However, civil society organizations have raised concerns that this plan is not the most cost effective or safe solution to the problem of water access. The project stands to flood 6 million square meters of natural areas and agricultural lands in the Bisri Valley, and will result in the dismantling of more than 50 historical sites. The dam is also planned to be built on an active seismic fault, posing risks of reservoir-triggered seismicity (RTS).
The National Campaign to Save the Bisri Valley has voiced a number of concerns about the Bisri Dam project, including the following:
The Bisri dam project receives financing from the World Bank, via two IBRD loans: the $200 million Greater Beirut Water Supply Project (and its $90 million Additional Financing) and the $474 million Lebanon Water Supply Augmentation Project. The Islamic Development Bank is also co-financing the Lebanon Water Supply Augmentation Project, and the Government of Lebanon is contributing domestic resources.