Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Israel solves water woes with desalination
omaha.com ^ | Friday, May 30, 2014 12:33 am | Updated: 11:46 pm, Fri May 30, 2014.

Posted on 05/31/2014 9:25:52 AM PDT by ckilmer

Israel solves water woes with desalination

 

Posted: Friday, May 30, 2014 12:33 am | Updated: 11:46 pm, Fri May 30, 2014.

Associated Press |

SOREK, Israel (AP) — After experiencing its driest winter on record, Israel is responding as never before — by doing nothing.

While previous droughts have been accompanied by impassioned public service advertisements to conserve, this time around it has been greeted with a shrug — thanks in large part to an aggressive desalination program that has transformed this perennially parched land into perhaps the most well-hydrated country in the region.

"We have all the water we need, even in the year which was the worst year ever regarding precipitation," said Avraham Tenne, head of the desalination division of Israel's Water Authority. "This is a huge revolution."

By solving its water woes, Israel has created the possibility of transforming the region in ways that were unthinkable just a few years ago. But reliance on this technology also carries some risks, including the danger of leaving a key element of the country's infrastructure vulnerable to attack.

Situated in the heart of the Middle East, Israel is in one of the driest regions on earth, traditionally relying on a short, rainy season each winter to replenish its limited supplies. But rainfall only covers about half of Israel's water needs, and this past winter, that amount was far less.

According to the Israeli Meteorological Service, northern Israel, which usually gets the heaviest rainfalls, received just 50 to 60 percent of the annual average.

Tenne said the country has managed to close its water gap through a mixture of conservation efforts, advances that allow nearly 90 percent of wastewater to be recycled for agricultural use and, in recent years, the construction of desalination plants.

Since 2005, Israel has opened four desalination plants, with a fifth set to go online later this year. Roughly 35 percent of Israel's drinking-quality water now comes from desalination. That number is expected to exceed 40 percent by next year and hit 70 percent in 2050.

The Sorek desalination plant, located roughly 15 kilometers (10 miles) south of Tel Aviv, provides a glimpse of that future.

With a loud humming sound, the massive complex produces roughly 20 percent of Israel's municipal water, sucking in seawater from the nearby Mediterranean through a pair of 2.5-meter-wide pipes, filtering it through advanced "membranes" that remove the salt, and churning out clean drinking water. A salty discharge, or brine, gets pumped back into the sea, where it is quickly absorbed. The facility, stretching nearly six football fields in length, opened late last year.

Avshalom Felber, chief executive of IDE Technologies, the plant's operator, said Sorek is the "largest and most advanced" of its kind in the world, producing 624,000 cubic meters of potable water each day. He said the production cost is among the world's lowest, meaning it could provide a typical family's water needs for about $300 to $500 a year.

"Basically this desalination, as a drought-proof solution, has proven itself for Israel," he said. "Israel has become ... water independent, let's say, since it launched this program of desalination plants."

By meeting its water needs, Israel can focus on longer-term agricultural, industrial and urban planning, he added.

Disputes over water have in the past sparked war, and finding a formula for dividing shared water resources has been one of the "core" issues in Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.

Jack Gilron, a desalination expert at Ben-Gurion University, said Israel should now use its expertise to solve regional water problems. "In the end, by everybody having enough water, we take away one unnecessary reason that there should be conflict," he said.

Israel has already taken some small steps in that direction. Last year, it signed an agreement to construct a shared desalination plant in Jordan and sell additional water to the Palestinians.

Israel's advances with desalination could help it provide additional water to the parched West Bank, either through transfers of treated water or by revising existing arrangements to give the Palestinians a larger share of shared natural sources.

"Desalination, combined with Israel's leadership in wastewater reuse, presents political opportunities that were not available even five years ago," said Gidon Bromberg, the Israel director of Friends of the Earth Middle East, an environmental advocacy group.

Under interim peace accords signed two decades ago, Israel controls 80 percent of shared resources, while Palestinians get just 20 percent. A more equitable deal could remove a key source of tension, opening the way for addressing other issues, he said.

But with the most recent round of peace talks having collapsed last month, there is little hope of making progress on any of the core issues anytime soon.

Moreover, Bromberg said desalination is not an end-all solution. The plants require immense amounts of energy, consuming roughly 10 percent of Israel's total electricity production, he said.

The exact impact of desalination plants on the wider Mediterranean also isn't clear, he added. A number of countries, including Cyprus, Lebanon and Egypt, are either using or considering the use of desalination plants.

IDE's Felber said the impact of returning brine to the sea is "minor." But Bromberg insists it is too early to say what impact multiple plants would have, saying "much more research is required."

Relying so heavily on desalination also creates a potential security risk. Missile strikes or other threats could potentially knock out large portions of the country's water supply.

The threat is even more acute in Arab countries of the Gulf, which rely on desalination for more than 90 percent of their water supplies and are located much closer to rival Iran.

The Sorek plant is heavily protected with fences, security cameras and guards, and it is not connected to the Internet, instead using a private server, to prevent cyber attacks. But like other key infrastructure, it could be susceptible to missile strikes. During a 2006 war, for instance, Lebanese Hezbollah militants attempted to strike an Israeli power plant.

Tenne, of the Water Authority, acknowledged that "anything in Israel is vulnerable," but said the same could be said for sensitive infrastructure behind enemy lines. "I hope that people will be smart enough not to harm infrastructure," he said.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Israel; US: California
KEYWORDS: california; desalination; israel; water
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061 next last
To: TexasFreeper2009

They are

http://www.ide-tech.com/case-study/carlsbad-germany-project/


41 posted on 05/31/2014 12:20:48 PM PDT by Lurkina.n.Learnin
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 11 | View Replies]

To: zeugma
The plants require immense amounts of energy, consuming roughly 10 percent of Israel's total electricity production, he said.

Small price to pay. The total motor rating at the Edmonston Pumping Plant on the Ca aquaduct is 1,120,000 hp or 835MW. No, that's not used all at once but it's there if they need it. That's just to move water up a mountain to the other side, not production.

42 posted on 05/31/2014 12:23:11 PM PDT by mikey_hates_everything
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: editor-surveyor

Some years ago plans were developed to have large tugboats tow icebergs to Saudi Arabia.


43 posted on 05/31/2014 1:31:45 PM PDT by Maine Mariner
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: editor-surveyor
Not only is Israel not “in the heart of the Middle East,” it isn’t even near the Middle East.

Some might fairly debate you with regard to whether Israel is considered to be geographically part of the Middle East, but that point aside, if not the "heart," might it be more correct to say the "brains" of the Middle East?

FReegards!

 photo million-vet-march.jpg

44 posted on 05/31/2014 1:40:10 PM PDT by Agamemnon (Darwinism is the glue that holds liberalism together)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 20 | View Replies]

To: piytar

well, yeah, after the formation of Israel, the next big thing that precedes the end of the world is that the deserts are all be turned green.

What turns the deserts green is the collapse of desalination costs (which includes the collapse of energy costs). Desalination costs have been falling in half about once decade.

Right now there are couple developments in the works that may/likely/will speed the decline rate of desalination costs— including lftr thorium reactors which will collapse the cost of energy and graphene membranes.


45 posted on 05/31/2014 2:10:15 PM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 35 | View Replies]

To: mikey_hates_everything

Small price to pay. The total motor rating at the Edmonston Pumping Plant on the Ca aquaduct is 1,120,000 hp or 835MW. No, that’s not used all at once but it’s there if they need it. That’s just to move water up a mountain to the other side, not production.
.................
You’d think that somewhere along the line they’d figure out how to put a propeller and generator in the pipes so that as the water moved back downhill they could recover the energy they used to move the water uphill.


46 posted on 05/31/2014 2:17:23 PM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: ckilmer

The real key here is energy. What was described in the article is reverse osmosis, which consumes a lot of energy.

However, there is a new technology that desalinates just as much water but uses a quarter of the energy. The secret is in nanotechnology.

Imagine a pipe that looked like it was lined with carbon. But the carbon is actually nanotubes, small pipes just large enough to pass single molecules of water at a time, nothing larger.

The water filtered through is actually not good to drink, as it is deionized and degassed. So to be used as drinking water, it needs to have a little bit of sea salt added, then aerated.

In any event, the pipes are easy to clean and low maintenance. You still need the energy to pump the salt water to the plant, and the energy to pump the now fresh water from the plant.


47 posted on 05/31/2014 2:19:31 PM PDT by yefragetuwrabrumuy ("Don't compare me to the almighty, compare me to the alternative." -Obama, 09-24-11)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Balding_Eagle

Read in it’s entirety, the article is pointing out what a horrible thing Israel’s desalination program is.

Dumping brine, unfair to the Philistines, using too much electricity, it’s a long list of evils that Gods Chosen People have embarked upon.
..............
Yeah its about inoculating California liberals from charges of hopeless stupidity and incompetence.


48 posted on 05/31/2014 2:19:42 PM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 33 | View Replies]

To: BipolarBob

I had the same idea. If California took care of its water needs from the Pacific, that would free up the enormous amounts they get from neighboring states which could go for irrigation, etc. inland.

Then I thought about the hoops they’d have to jump through to get the permits to build a desalination plant, and hopes grew dim.


49 posted on 05/31/2014 2:22:12 PM PDT by Tucker39 (Welcome to America! Now speak English; and keep to the right....In driving, in Faith, and in politic)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: yefragetuwrabrumuy

I don’t disagree with you. I luv the promise of carbon nanotubes and more recently graphene. So far they have been just promises. But the science of materials research is moving so profoundly these days that somewhere in the next decade something is going to give in a big way.

On the energy side—there is an immense amount of smoke and excitement coming out of nuclear energy research people these days that suggests — in under a decade or so some big breaks will be made to collapse the cost of energy. (this compares with fusion energy which has been 20 years off for the last 50 years.)


50 posted on 05/31/2014 2:27:10 PM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 47 | View Replies]

To: ckilmer
collapse the cost of energy.

Molten salt, lead and sodium nuclear reactors, along with some French-like standardization may reduce nuclear costs somewhat. I haven't run across forecasts of a major drop in costs, however, at least not until the advent of thorium reactors. What technology are you referencing?

51 posted on 05/31/2014 5:56:32 PM PDT by Praxeologue
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 50 | View Replies]

To: zeugma

Desalinisation is even more dominant in the Gulf Arab states - 90% of their water comes from it. So, if the drawbacks listed in this article were serious, one would expect them to be already evident in the Persian Gulf.


52 posted on 05/31/2014 8:49:25 PM PDT by BlackVeil ('The past is never dead. It's not even past.' William Faulkner)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 26 | View Replies]

To: Kennard

Molten salt, lead and sodium nuclear reactors, along with some French-like standardization may reduce nuclear costs somewhat. I haven’t run across forecasts of a major drop in costs, however, at least not until the advent of thorium reactors. What technology are you referencing?
................
I’m referring to the lftr thorium reactors. they can also be used to burn up nuclear wastes. there’s a couple companies working on that including Transatomic, Flibe, and working off different designs Terrapower and a Canadian company whose name I’ve forgotten


53 posted on 05/31/2014 8:58:15 PM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 51 | View Replies]

To: ckilmer

Thorium may take off faster than many thought even a couple of years ago. We shall see!


54 posted on 05/31/2014 9:36:26 PM PDT by Praxeologue
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 53 | View Replies]

To: Genoa

It really helps if your not living in the 2nd century, or whenever the minions of Mad Mo want to take us back to.


55 posted on 05/31/2014 9:48:43 PM PDT by AFreeBird
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: DoughtyOne

Knowing the idiots in California any extra water from desalination would be used for....the fish.


56 posted on 05/31/2014 10:14:51 PM PDT by Kozak ("It may be dangerous to be America's enemy, but to be America's friend is fatal" Henry Kissinger)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: ckilmer

The Navy installed a desalinization plant in Gitmo after Castro cut off our water supply. We lived off water from ocean tankers while they built the plant. The water from the tankers was rank. The desal water was a slight improvement.


57 posted on 05/31/2014 10:19:45 PM PDT by gitmo (If your theology doesn't become your biography, what good is it?)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Kennard

I sure hope you’re right.

Right now I don’t think my much actual work is being done.

I think both Flibe and Transatomic Power are still promoting the concept rather than doing any actual work. They likely both have received a million or so to keep their principals in the game. I’m just talking about whatever you can google. So there may be more going on behind the scenes. Gates’ Terrpower is has the deeper pockets but they don’t have an lftr design and I wonder if their scientists are better at doing simulations than doing actual bench work. There’s also a canadian company whose name I’ve forgotten. I’ve seen them do presentations and they seem to be actively moving ahead. I think they’re running some tests with a Chilean nuclear power plant to see if thorium works there. Its much along the same lines as a successful experiment with a norwegian nuclear power plant. They tested thorium there to see if it would work. apparently it did.

The Chinese have moved up the date on which they want their first lftr thorium plant from 20 years to 10 years.

There was a big conference at CERN concerning thorium last fall after which one big french nuclear company signed on to test thorium.

The Indians have a conventional nuclear program running that doing tests with thorium.

There’s a lot of talk from half a bunch of different countries Including the germans english japanese australians about thorium reactors.

its mostly smoke for now. but you can do search on google for thorium reactor and set the search limit to one week and there’s always at least couple articles .

Here’s a google trends for thorium
http://www.google.com/trends/explore?q=thorium#q=thorium&cmpt=q

my own wag is that in a couple years a very public world wide competition will break out to develop the first thorium reactor.


58 posted on 06/01/2014 5:31:29 AM PDT by ckilmer
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies]

To: Kozak

LOL, yes I know what you mean. You’re probably thinking of Klammath. That’s in Southern Oregon, but the Lefties in California are not likely to want to see Oregonians outLeft them.


59 posted on 06/01/2014 8:33:34 AM PDT by DoughtyOne
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: dennisw; Cachelot; Nix 2; veronica; Catspaw; knighthawk; Alouette; Optimist; weikel; Lent; GregB; ..
Middle East and terrorism, occasional political and Jewish issues Ping List. High Volume

If you’d like to be on or off, please FR mail me.

..................

60 posted on 06/02/2014 5:43:58 AM PDT by SJackson (the Democrats take back control, we donÂ’t make (this) kind of naked power grab, J Biden)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson