Is
the Dead Sea dying? Water loss continues at record rate
The
Dead Sea is shrinking at a record rate, prompting calls for Israel
and Jordan to stop fertilizer makers from siphoning so much of the
water whose restorative powers have attracted visitors since biblical
times
28
October, 2012
The
salty inland lake bordering the nations dropped a record 1.5 meters
(4.9 feet) over the last 12 months because of industry use and
evaporation, the Hydrological Service of Israel said. That's the
steepest Dead Sea decline since data-keeping started in the 1950s.
Half the drop was caused by Israel Chemicals Ltd. and Jordan's Arab
Potash Co., said Gidon Bromberg, Israeli director of the Friends of
Earth Middle East.
"This
is unacceptable and speaks to the urgency of the need to force
industry to change their extraction process," Bromberg said in
an interview from Tel Aviv.
The
makers of potash, a raw material for fertilizer, are competing for
water with a centuries-old tourism industry on the Dead Sea, Israel's
most crowded leisure destination last year with 857,000 visitors.
That's more packed than Tel Aviv and Eilat's beach resorts, the
Tourism Ministry said.
It
isn't only pumping causing the degradation of the Dead Sea, a
biblical refuge for King David. Agriculture diverts water for crops
from the Jordan River that feeds into the Dead Sea, adding to a
decline that's created potentially life-threatening sinkholes by the
shore.
On
the north shore of the Dead Sea, 75 kilometers (47 miles) long 50
years ago and 55 kilometers now according to the environmental group,
spas offer the medicinal benefits of mud baths and mineral springs.
Those wanting to bob in waters about 10 times as salty as the ocean
must either ride in a cart for several minutes or take a hike that's
a little longer.
Dead
Sea Works, owned by Israel Chemicals, denied any increased pumping,
saying it has used 150 million to 170 million cubic meters a year
from the sea for two decades.
"The
main reason for the declining sea level is the increased usage of the
water that used to flow to the Dead Sea in the past, especially from
the Jordan River, by all countries in the region," the company
said in an emailed statement.
It's
already paying to use Dead Sea water through royalties that it said
have doubled since the beginning of the year, Dead Sea Works said.
Israel Chemicals agreed in December that royalty payments on potash
production above certain levels would double to 10 percent.
"Charging
the Dead Sea Works per water usage by cubic meter will not affect the
pumping volume since the amount of pumping is a function of the
evaporation ponds' surface area and changing climate conditions
alone," it said.
"We're
keen on doing all possible to preserve the Dead Sea, which is
shrinking annually," Issa Shboul, spokesperson of Jordan's
Ministry of Environment, said by phone.
"We
regularly request the potash companies and other companies that
benefit from the Dead Sea water for their business to adopt the
latest technological advances to reduce the negative impact on the
Dead Sea level," Shboul said.
Jordan
and Israel should reinvigorate a joint committee that hasn't met for
more than a decade to work on developing extraction techniques that
use less water, Bromberg said.
Israel's
Environment Ministry said it's working on a proposal with the
government that examines the use of all resources, including
phosphates and mineral water.
Israel
allocated 850 million shekels ($223 million) this year to
rehabilitate and develop the Dead Sea's tourism potential. Spencer
Tunick's group photo in 2011 of naked people at a beach raised
awareness of sinkholes and shrinking shores of the lowest place on
Earth at 414 meters below sea level.
About
one-third of the Dead Sea's surface area has disappeared and
sinkholes are increasingly common as the waters shrink amid drought,
agricultural diversion, largely from the Jordan River, and pumping to
extract minerals for fertilizers.
Jordanian,
Palestinian and Israeli policymakers, under the auspices of the World
Bank, have been examining various plans to halt the Dead Sea's
decline. These include two tunnels and a pipeline that may cost as
much as $10 billion. These would transfer water about 110 miles from
the Red Sea and brine from desalination plants to keep Dead Sea
levels stable.
Preliminary
reports from the Red Sea-Dead Sea Water Conveyance Study Program have
shown that mixing sea water, desalination brine or both with Dead Sea
water entails risks, especially when amounts exceed 300 million cubic
meters a year.
The
Dead Sea has a current annual deficit of 700 million cubic meters,
Bromberg said. The risks include gypsum and other microorganism
growth caused by mixing different types of water.
Major
parts of the study are expected to be completed and posted online by
the end of the month, according to an official with knowledge of the
report. These include drafts of final reports on alternatives,
feasibility and environmental assessments.
More
can be done to stop the deterioration to an area home to rare
wildlife including leopards, ibex and the griffon vulture, Bromberg
said.
"We
are calling on Jordan and Israel to introduce legislation that would
require Dead Sea waters to have a price, with pumping rates and
licensed, monitored meters," he said. "All other sources of
water are extracted under license."
The
beach photographed by Tunick meanwhile has changed beyond recognition
in a year with salt-encrusted rocks more common now as Dead Sea
waters recede, environmentalists say.
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