Gaza’s $70 billion reconstruction could take decades after 84% destruction
By isabelle // 2025-11-04
 
  • Gaza faces a staggering $70 billion and decades-long reconstruction effort.
  • Over 60 million tonnes of dangerous rubble containing explosives must be cleared.
  • Critical water, sanitation, and power infrastructure have been nearly totally destroyed.
  • Housing reconstruction is a monumental task with hundreds of thousands of units lost.
  • The international community is indicating willingness to fund this generational challenge.
The staggering scale of destruction left by two years of war in Gaza presents a challenge of almost unimaginable proportions, requiring an estimated $70 billion and decades of work to rebuild the shattered enclave. According to United Nations experts, the level of destruction across Gaza is now at 84 percent, with that figure rising to a near-total 92 percent in Gaza City. The international community now faces the monumental task of clearing over 60 million tonnes of dangerous rubble and reconstructing housing, water systems, electricity, schools, and hospitals from the ground up.

The rubble of war

The first and most dangerous step is clearing the colossal amount of debris. Assessments suggest there are more than 60 million tonnes of rubble waiting to be cleared. This debris is not merely concrete and twisted metal; it also contains human remains and unexploded bombs, posing grave threats to anyone nearby. The United Nations Development Programme has already begun this painstaking work, removing about 81,000 tonnes, which equates to roughly 3,100 truckloads. This initial effort is primarily to provide access for humanitarian actors delivering aid. Experts warn that the process of making sites safe is complex. "From a safety and humane perspective, the first thing you have to do is make the sites that have been bombed-out safe," says former JCB executive Philip Bouverat. This involves sorting, separating, and crushing the debris, a logistical nightmare in a territory where basic infrastructure has been erased. The sheer volume of material is so vast that one report compared it to 13 times the mass of the pyramids of Giza.

A decimated infrastructure

The damage to essential services is catastrophic. Rebuilding the very foundations of a functional society will be a long-term endeavor. The housing situation is particularly dire. The UN estimates that 282,904 houses and apartments have been damaged or destroyed, a figure that is likely an underestimate. Rebuilding Gaza's housing "could take decades," according to Shelly Culbertson of the RAND Corporation. Critical water and sanitation systems have been obliterated. More than 70 percent of the territory's water and sanitation facilities have been damaged or destroyed. All six of Gaza’s wastewater treatment plants are reported to be damaged, creating a severe risk of sewage-borne disease. The power grid is also in a state of near-total collapse, with more than 80 percent of generation and distribution assets destroyed or non-operational. The social fabric has been torn apart. Around half of Gaza's pre-war population was under 18, yet the UN agency for Palestine refugees reports that 91.8 percent of all school buildings will require full reconstruction or major rehabilitation. Higher education institutions have not been spared, with several universities demolished by Israeli troops during the conflict.

A long road ahead

Despite the daunting challenges, there are indications that the international community is preparing to help. A UN official reported "very positive news" and "very good indications" from potential donors. European and Arab nations, Canada, and the United States have all shown a willingness to contribute to the massive $70 billion reconstruction effort. The path forward, however, is filled with obstacles beyond just funding. The process will require the mass import of construction materials, a task so large that one expert suggested the first priority should be building a deep-water port to receive thousands of container-loads. The freedom of movement for people and goods will be a central challenge for any recovery. Andreas Krieg, a Middle East security expert from King's College London, summarized the disheartening reality, stating, "It's worse than starting from scratch - here you aren't starting in the sand, you are starting with rubble." The journey from rubble to recovery will be the work of a generation, a sobering testament to the immense human and physical cost of the conflict. For the people of Gaza, the end of the fighting marks not a return to normal life, but the beginning of an arduous struggle to rebuild one. Sources for this article include: MiddleEastEye.net BBC.co.uk UN.org ABCNews.go.com Reuters.com