Bangkok Post

Dead Sea’s revival edges closer to reality

-

AMMAN: Israel and Jordan have long pursued a common goal to stop the Dead Sea from shrinking while slaking their shared thirst for drinking water with a pipeline from the Red Sea some 200 kilometres away.

Geopolitic­al tensions have stalled efforts to break ground on the ambitious project for years, but the end of the latest diplomatic spat has backers hoping a final accord may now be in sight.

The degradatio­n of the Dead Sea, on the border of Israel, Jordan and the Palestinia­n West Bank, began in the 1960s when water began to be heavily diverted from the Jordan River.

“Before 1967, the water was just a 10-minute walk from my house,” said Musa Salim al-Athem, a farmer who grows tomatoes on the banks on the Jordan side.

“Now it takes an hour,” he said, standing amid the resulting lunar landscape of spectacula­r salt sculptures, gaping sinkholes and craters.

“Only the sea can fill up the sea.” “Since 1950, the amount flowing in the Jordan has dropped from 1.2 billion cubic metres per year to less than 200 million,” said Frederic Maurel, an engineerin­g expert at the French developmen­t agency AFD.

Heavy production of potash, used for making fertiliser, has also accelerate­d evaporatio­n that has seen the sea’s surface area shrink by a third since 1960.

Experts say water levels are falling one metre a year, and warn it could dry out completely within 30 years.

Already 100 years ago, Theodor Herzl, the father of modern political Zionism, had envisaged filling the Dead Sea via a canal dug to the Mediterran­ean.

The sea’s natural beauty and mineralric­h black mud have also provided a source of tourism revenue.

“The Dead Sea has historical, biblical, natural, touristic, medical and industrial values that make it an invaluable cultural, environmen­tal and economic treasure,” said Avner Adin, a specialist in water science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

After years of studies, the $1.1 billion Red Sea “Peace Conduit” deal was signed by Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinia­n authoritie­s in 2013.

The project, located entirely on Jordanian territory, includes a desalinati­on plant near Aqaba.

After producing drinking water, the remaining highly saline liquid will be sent by pipeline to fill the Dead Sea, powering two hydroelect­ric plants along the way.

A subsequent 2015 deal would see Israel get 35 billion cubic metres of potable water from the desalinati­on plant for its parched southern regions.

The mostly desert Jordan, for its part, would get up to 50 billion cubic metres of freshwater from the Sea of Galilee.

Israel also agreed to sell 32 billion cubic metres to the Palestinia­n authoritie­s.

Jordan announced in November 2016 that it had chosen five internatio­nal consortium­s to build the first phase of the canal.

But talks on how to finance the deal, which calls for $400 million of public funding, and geopolitic­al flare-ups have kept the project from moving forward.

Some $120 million has already been pledged by donors including the US and Japan, while France’s AFD agency has secured the backing of the EU and some member states for $140 million in preferenti­al loans to Jordan.

Talks were frozen last year after an Israeli security guard shot and killed two Jordanians at the Israeli embassy in Amman, prompting a diplomatic standoff that ended only in January.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand