Jordan Times
Tuesday, May 10, 2005
Efforts afoot to save Dead Sea
AMMAN (AFP) — Countries surrounding the slowly
vanishing Dead Sea on Monday agreed to look into building a canal to breathe new
life into the lowest and most saline place on earth.
“Jordan, Israel and the Palestinian Authority on Monday signed an agreement to
go ahead with the feasibility study for this project,” said a source at the
Ministry of Water and Irrigation here.
The proposed canal would run from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea, the level of
which has dropped by a third since the 1960s and continues to fall by about a
meter a year.
Environmental experts have repeatedly warned that the Dead Sea is in danger of
drying up as Jordan, Israel and the Palestinians divert the waters of the Jordan
River, which feeds it, for agriculture.
The agreement was signed by Jordanian Minister of Water and Irrigation Raed Abu
Saud, Palestinian Planning Minister Ghassan Khatib and Israeli Infrastructure
Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer.
The proposed canal would bring water from the Red Sea to a power station and a
desalination plant in Jordan and would take about five years to build.
“The project will provide around 870 million cubic meters of freshwater a year
to the three countries on the Dead Sea, as well as around 550 megawatts of
electricity a year,” said the source.
The idea for the project has been around for years, but has been stalled by
tensions between Israel and the Palestinians.