Summary: | Cyprus is the most water insecure of the European Union member countries. This is the case despite the
fact that its water landscape – surface, underground and coastal – has been developed almost to its maximum, with
large and costly dams, conveyors and desalination plants. This paper provides an historical and technopolitical
perspective on this expensively built and precarious water supply regime. We demonstrate how water supply has
been central to the formation of the Republic of Cyprus (RoC) from the end of colonialism in 1960, through to the
1974 division of the island, and then the 2004 integration of the RoC into the European Union. The paper exposes
how, at critical turns, water infrastructure constituted a material practice that shaped the economy’s motive
powers, that is, agriculture and tourism. We examine how state actors and international experts promoted these
economic activities in ways that relied heavily on water-intensive practices. This led, in turn, to the normalisation
of large-scale, capital-intensive water supply projects that consolidated the power of a precarious republic whose
control over its population was only partial. Environmentally harmful practices came to be accepted as inevitable
or even as crucial for the very existence of the Republic; examples of this include illegal drilling for irrigation in the
south-eastern area of Kokkinokhoria and supply of hotel resorts in the village of Ayia Napa and, the supply of golf
courses with subsidised agricultural water. We conclude that, in effect, this material practice creates a long-term
technopolitical dynamic that downplays or excludes demand-side water policies and ecological concerns.
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