The Jerusalem Post

‘Catastroph­e looms for Dead Sea as incoming water sources dry up’

- • By NIBEDITA SEN

The Dead Sea sinkhole situation is worsening, according to a marine scientist, who is warning of a looming environmen­tal catastroph­e. “At present, there are over 6,000 sinkholes on the western [Israeli] side alone,” said Dr. Michael Lazar, from the Department of Marine Geoscience­s at the University of Haifa.

Since the 1960s, the Dead Sea has lost a third of its surface area, and the water continues to recedes by about a meter every year. A report released by the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry in 2014, based on 10 years of research and data collection, attributes this decline to evaporatio­n accelerate­d by global warming and climate change as well as human activities, such as the diversion of water from the Jordan River and mineral extraction. Downstream from Syrian and Lebanese tributarie­s, water is diverted for agricultur­al and other purposes. This is essentiall­y turning off the Dead Sea’s tap, with very little water now flowing into it.

In addition, water is being pumped from the sea to the Dead Sea Works factories’ artificial evaporatio­n ponds. Very little water enters the salt lake in the north but lots of water exits in the south.

“The level of the lake is dropping at a rate of more than one meter per year,” said Lazar. “This is due to a combinatio­n of factors working together. This combinatio­n of anthropoge­nic interventi­on and climate change is causing the lake to shrink. As a result of this, thousands of

sinkholes are developing along the shore and causing real problems.”

The Israel Meteorolog­ical Service recently published a report on extreme weather events that indicates a significan­t warming trend in all regions of the country. The warming rate is higher in the west – the coastal plain, the northern Negev and the mountain region – than it is in the valleys, the east, and the north, where the rate of temperatur­e increases was the lowest.

By the end of the 21st century, precipitat­ion is likely to decrease by 10%. The change in rainfall distributi­on is expected to result in years of below-average rainfall, a phenomenon that could lead to decreased replenishm­ent of water sources causing an increase of salinity of water sources.

The flow of the Jordan River – the main water source of the Sea of Galilee and the Dead Sea – is expected to shrink by up to 22% (or possibly more) in the 21st century. This is a dramatic trend for the region in terms of water availabili­ty and water scarcity.

“There is a clear correlatio­n between sinkhole collapse and peak drought periods,” Lazar said directly linking the increase in sinkholes to the climate crisis.

 ?? (Yaniv Nadav/Flash90) ?? A SINKHOLE NEAR the Dead Sea.
(Yaniv Nadav/Flash90) A SINKHOLE NEAR the Dead Sea.

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