The Jerusalem Post

New desalinati­on plants to fight drought

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Five years into a drought that has left its natural water sources at their lowest in a century, Israel plans to build two new desalinati­on plants and expand its pipelines to ease stress on farmers and the environmen­t.

The lack of rainfall has overtaxed Israel’s desalinati­on and waste-water treatment plants, choking its most fertile regions in the North and bringing calls for government action.

“The shortage of natural water is the worst that has been measured in about 100 years and is bringing water sources in the North to an unpreceden­ted low point,” Energy and Water Minister Yuval Steinitz said on Monday.

The Water Ministry announced a plan to build two more desalinati­on plants to reinforce the five built along the Mediterran­ean coast over the past 13 years. It did not include their price, but similar facilities in Israel have cost about $400 million.

It will also expand the country’s water grid, cut back on pumping from natural springs to rehabilita­te rivers that have dried up, and possibly even pump large amounts of water into the ailing Lake Kinneret (the Sea of Galilee), near the border with Syria that is Israel’s main freshwater source.

In the Middle East, one of the region’s most vulnerable to climate change, water is also the subject of wider tensions. Intense pressure on already scarce water resources could lead to an increase in migration and the risk of conflict, the World Bank has warned.

Steinitz said he will bring the plan to the government for approval in the coming weeks. (Reuters)

 ?? (Gil Cohen Magen/Reuters) ?? A WORKER watches desalinate­d water shoot into the Port of Haifa in 2009.
(Gil Cohen Magen/Reuters) A WORKER watches desalinate­d water shoot into the Port of Haifa in 2009.

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