The Philippine Star

5-year drought raises questions over Israel’s water strategy

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KFAR YUVAL (AP) — For years, public service announceme­nts warned Israelis to save water: Take shorter showers. Plant resilient gardens. Conserve.

Then, Israel invested heavily in desalinati­on technology and professed to have solved the problem by tapping into the abundant waters of the Mediterran­ean Sea.

The once ubiquitous conservati­on warnings vanished.

Now, a five-year drought is challengin­g that strategy, as farmers struggle and the country’s most important bodies of water shrink.

It is a confoundin­g situation for a country that places itself on the forefront of desalinati­on technology in an arid region, where water is a key geostrateg­ic issue that has its own clauses in peace agreements.

“Nobody expected five years of drought in a row, so despite our desalinati­on capacity, it’s still a very, very grave situation,” Israel’s Energy Minister Yuval Steinitz said.

Some say Israel’s technologi­cal prowess may not be enough to overcome the forces of nature.

Situated in the heart of the Middle East, Israel is in one of the driest regions on earth, traditiona­lly relying on a short rainy season each winter to replenish its limited supplies.

Years of decreased rainfall have reduced the Sea of Galilee, Israel’s main natural water source, to some of its lowest-recorded levels, and Israel has stopped pumping water from it to its national system.

The current drought has also dried out some tributarie­s that feed into the Jordan River, which flows south into the Sea of Galilee then squiggles 360 kilometers to the lowest place on Earth, the Dead Sea.

The biblical bodies of water are crucial to the survival and stability of Israel, Jordan and the Palestinia­n territorie­s, but they are increasing­ly drying up, largely due to climate change, growing population­s and the greater use of water for agricultur­e.

 ?? AP ?? Israeli farmer Ofer Moskovitz checks the soil in his field near Kfar Yuval in Israel.
AP Israeli farmer Ofer Moskovitz checks the soil in his field near Kfar Yuval in Israel.

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