Israel no longer worried about
its water supply, thanks to desalination plants
BY JOEL GREENBERG. MCCLATCHY
FOREIGN STAFF. HADERA, Israel
http://www.miamiherald.com/2014/03/20/4007125/israel-no-longer-worried-about.html
Israel has gone through one of
the driest winters in its history, but despite the lean rainy season, the
government has suspended a longstanding campaign to conserve water.
The familiar public messages
during recent years of drought, often showing images of parched earth, have
disappeared from television despite weeks of balmy weather with record low
rainfalls in some areas.
The level of the Sea of Galilee,
the country’s natural water reservoir, is no longer closely tracked in news
reports or the subject of anxious national discussion.
The reason: Israel has in recent
years achieved a quiet water revolution through desalination.
With four plants currently in
operation, all built since 2005, and a fifth slated to go into service this
year, Israel is meeting much of its water needs by purifying seawater from the
Mediterranean. Some 80 percent of domestic water use in Israeli cities comes
from desalinated water, according to Israeli officials.
“There’s no water problem because
of the desalination,” said Hila Gil, director of the desalination division in
the Israel Water Authority. “The problem is no longer on the agenda.”
The struggle over scarce water
resources has fueled conflict between Israel and its neighbors, but the country
is now finding itself increasingly self-sufficient after years of dependency on
rainfall and subterranean aquifers.
Israel’s experience might also
offer some important lessons, or at least contrast, for states like California.
Now gripped by drought, with the all-important snowpack averaging only 26
percent of normal, California has struggled with desalination efforts in the
past.
At present, more than a dozen
desalination projects are at various stages of planning in the state, and the
California Department of Water Resources will be announcing a new round of
desalination grants in May. The grants are very modest, though; the last round,
for instance, offered just $45,000 to study the technology in southern San Luis
Obispo County.
The plants themselves, meanwhile,
are costly and frequently controversial. One big plant built two decades ago
near Santa Barbara, in the final years of an earlier drought, is now dormant. Officials
estimate it would cost $20 million or more to reactivate it.
A proposal for a 50
million-gallon-per-day facility at Huntington Beach in Southern California
would cost hundreds of millions of dollars to build. In November, the
California Coastal Commission postponed granting the project a permit pending
more studies.
Each of Israel’s plants cost
between $300 million and $450 million to build. The plants are privately owned
and operated, under a contract with the government, which buys the water from
the plants. The budget for water purchases comes from water charges to
consumers. The plants are not subsidized.
Israel’s efforts to solve its
water shortage haven’t ended with desalination. The country treats and recycles
more than 80 percent of its wastewater, using it primarily for agriculture,
making it a world leader in that field.
By easing its own water crunch,
experts say, Israel could free up more of the precious resource in a possible
peace agreement with the Palestinians.
At a water desalination plant on
the sea near the northern Israeli town of Hadera, water pumped in from the
Mediterranean is pushed through rows of multi-layered plastic membranes and,
through a process called reverse osmosis, emerges after 90 minutes as tasty
drinking water.
The company that runs the
facility, IDE Technologies, which is based in Israel, recently showed foreign
visitors around the plant, touting its performance along with another plant at
Soreq, near the southern Israeli coast, the largest reverse osmosis desalination
plant in the world. That plant produces 150 million cubic meters of potable
water a year.
IDE is also involved in building
seawater desalination plants abroad, including what is expected to be the
largest such plant in the Western Hemisphere at Carlsbad, Calif., able to
provide 50 million of gallons of potable water a day.
The Israeli plants, mostly
located along the coast, operate at high energy efficiency and are some of the
most cost-efficient in the world, when measured against similar plants in other
countries, according to official figures. Desalinated water at the Soreq plant
is produced at the price of 52 cents a cubic meter, according to terms of a
government tender, and while actual rates fluctuate according to energy costs,
currency exchange and the cost-of-living index, they remain significantly lower
than in other nations.
But environmental experts caution
that desalination has its costs, among them high energy consumption from power
plants that emit greenhouse gases, use of scarce land on Israel’s crowded
seacoast, and emission of highly concentrated saline water and chemicals into
the ocean, with unclear environmental consequences.
“In Israel, environmental costs
are not taken into account when calculating the costs of desalinated water,”
said Nurit Kliot, a professor of environmental studies at Haifa University.
Gidon Bromberg, Israeli director
of Friends of the Earth Middle East, a regional environmental group, said
desalination should be part of integrated water policy that included conservation
and use of solar energy to power desalination plants.
“A level of desalination is
absolutely necessary because the population of this region has gone way beyond
the carrying capacity of natural water resources, but desalination needs to be
brought in not as the first option, but as the last option,” Bromberg said.
“Water conservation is now out
the window,” Bromberg noted, lamenting the suspension of the campaign to save
water.
Bromberg said the government
needs to encourage efficient water use by reducing water subsidies for farming
and by regulating crops to avoid those that require heavy irrigation, such as
tropical fruits.
In addition, he said, Israel is
still at “an infant stage” when it comes to recycling what is known as gray
water from sinks, showers and baths for use in toilets or gardens.
In peace negotiations with the
Palestinians, desalination could allow for more equitable sharing of natural
water resources in the West Bank, now largely controlled by Israel, according
to Bromberg.
“Increasing the pie through
desalination allows the natural water to be shared at low political cost for
Israel and at a high political gain for Abu Mazen,” he said, using the nickname
of Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas. “Allowing more water to flow in every
Palestinian tap has immediate impact on the quality of life of all
Palestinians. This is relevant to the (peace) efforts of Secretary of State
(John) Kerry. We can move forward rapidly on water.”
Michael Doyle of the Washington
Bureau contributed.
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