Jordan
to drill fossil water wells a half-mile underground – “After
this, we are out of chances”
1
January 2019
AMMAN,
Jordan (NBC News) – For the past decade, Khawla Qisi has trapped
herself at home on Fridays. It’s the only day of the week her
apartment building receives water, and she has to make the most of
it.
“I
can't do anything else but focus on the water," she said.
Jordan
has struggled with its water supply for decades. The arid nation
receives roughly 20 days of rain per year and climate change is
making conditions worse just as water demands from the growing
population increase.
At
the center of the government's efforts to obtain more of this
precious resource is a patch of desert swirling with dust devils
about 32 miles south of Amman.
Seven
new wells are scheduled to be built here to tap the Disi, a deep
aquifer that contains so-called fossil water that accumulated 10,000
to 30,000 years ago. It's the last source of fresh groundwater for
the country, experts say.
"After
this, we are out of chances," said Marwan Al-Raggad, a
hydrogeology professor at the University of Jordan.
Reaching
it requires drilling about twice as deep as groundwater aquifers —
which are typically 1,640 feet underground and refilled by rainwater.
“It
means huge energy is needed to extract this water,” said Ali Subah,
general secretary of Jordan's water and irrigation ministry. “It
will be expensive.” [more]
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