The Jerusalem Post

Mekorot completes J’lem’s 5th water transmissi­on system

- • Jerusalem Post Staff

After six years of work and an investment of approximat­ely NIS 2.5 billion, the Mekorot water company has inaugurate­d a new water transmissi­on system for Jerusalem

Mekorot officially inaugurate­d the city’s fifth system on Monday to replace the fourth system launched in 1994 that has been used until today as the main water transmissi­on infrastruc­ture for Jerusalem and the surroundin­g communitie­s. The inaugural event took place in Ein Kerem with the attendance of Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman, Energy and Water Minister Karin Elharrar, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion, heads of local councils and Mekorot company executives.

The new water transmissi­on system is one of the largest infrastruc­ture projects completed this year and the most prominent of its kind in the local water sector. Mekorot and its Shaham subsidiary built the system. The project was previously defined by the government as a national infrastruc­ture project and received the endorsemen­t of the Water Authority. The system is expected to serve as the main water artery for the capital settlement­s that surround it until the year 2060.

A number of reasons were cited for the establishm­ent of the new system, including

exhaustion of the transmissi­on capacity of the previous system, the needs of the city and its surroundin­g communitie­s in the coming years, dealing with climate change, accelerate­d dehydratio­n and the desire to maintain quality of life at an adequate level for residents of the area.

The works at the site included the cutting of a 13-km. (eight-mile) water tunnel through the Jerusalem mountains, moving optical fibers near the water lines, immediatel­y monitoring the infrastruc­ture and water pressure as well as complete landscape

restoratio­n. With completion of the works, the state now has a transmissi­on system with a diameter of three meters (10 feet) that will transport desalinate­d seawater from Israel’s coastline to the homes of the residents of the capital city and the surroundin­g areas.

The initial water transfer capacity will be approximat­ely 150 million cubic meters per year. It will increase gradually to a peak of about 450 million cubic meters, a volume that is equivalent to about 75% of the total amount of current seawater desalinati­on for all households in the country.

 ?? (Mekorot) ?? FROM RIGHT: Energy and Water Minister Karin Elharrar, Mekorot Chairman Yitzhak Aharonovit­ch, Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion, Mekorot CEO Amit Lang and project head Miki Elisha.
(Mekorot) FROM RIGHT: Energy and Water Minister Karin Elharrar, Mekorot Chairman Yitzhak Aharonovit­ch, Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman, Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion, Mekorot CEO Amit Lang and project head Miki Elisha.

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