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The Emergence of Desalination Technologies as a Means of Augmenting Water Supply and Ameliorating Conflict in the Middle East Clive Lipchin, PhD and Shmuel Brenner, PhD Arava Institute for Environmental Studies www.arava.org

The Emergence of Desalination Technologies as a Means of Augmenting Water Supply and Ameliorating Conflict in the Middle East Clive Lipchin, PhD and Shmuel

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The Emergence of Desalination Technologies as a Means of

Augmenting Water Supply and Ameliorating Conflict in the

Middle East

Clive Lipchin, PhD and Shmuel Brenner, PhDArava Institute for Environmental Studies

www.arava.org

Water Stress Worldwide: 1995-2025

Source: UNEP, GRID, Arendal, Oswald

SOURCES OF WATER3 Major Sources:

Jordan River System / Kinneret

Mountain Aquifer

Coastal Aquifer

Chronic Water ScarcityChronic Water ScarcityFor Reference:

<1000 m3/cap/yr - Water Poor

<500 m3/cap/yr - Chronic Water Scarcity

U.S. => 9,710 m3/cap/yr

World average 7,000 m3/cap/yr

Israel => 270-300 m3/cap/yr (340 w/sewage)

Jordan => 230 m3/cap/yr (245 w/sewage)

Palestinians => 95 m3/cap/yr

Lebanon => 1,300 m3/cap/yr

ME Water Resources – Water Crisis

Water level of the mountain aquifer

Water Supply and Demand in the Middle East (Israel, PA, Jordan)

Data Source: Tahal

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

7000

8000

2000 2010 2040

Year

mcm

/yea

r

Supply

Demand

Water Culture in the ME

• Israel– Western/Zionist Attitudes– Technological Optimism– Hegemony of Agriculture (national level)– Water as a commodity (public ownership,

privatization)– Despite scarcity, little public input in decision

making

WATER MANAGEMENT WATER MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORKFRAMEWORK• All Water is Property of the State

• National Water Commission (NWC) Allocates Water to Users

• NWC Has Responsibility to Allocate “in the Public’s Interest”

Potable water consumption by purpose in percentages (Source: Israel Central Bureau

of Statistics, 2004)

1983 1993 2003

Agriculture 71 64 56

Domestic 23 29 38

Industry 6 7 6

Total 100 100 100

Inherent Water Problems

• Global climate change

• Increasing standard of living = Rising demand

• Commitments to the neighbors

• Deterioration of water quality

• Overexploitation of surface and ground waters

• Pricing

The Promise of Desalination

Seawater/brackish water Drinking water

Office of the Governor of Texas

SAN ANTONIO -Gov. Rick Perry today called for the construction of the state's first large-scale ocean water desalination plant as one step toward securing an abundant water supply to meet Texas' future needs………

Press Release -April 29, 2002

Time-Series of Global Desalination Capacity, January 2005The bars show annual new installed capacity, and the line shows cumulative installed capacity.

Source: Cooley, H. et. al. (2006) Desalination with a Grain of Salt: A California Perspective. Pacific Institute

Countries with More Than 1% of Global Desalination Capacity, January 2005

Source: Cooley, H. et. al. (2006) Desalination with a Grain of Salt: A California Perspective. Pacific Institute

• Efficient technology– MSF/RO

• Good quality product– Drinking water

• The price is right– $0.50/cubic meter

• But… desalination is an industrial process

The Promise of Desalination

Seawater desalination capacity in cbm/day in the Mediterranean

basin

Desalination is an Industrial Process

• Inputs– Seawater/brackish water– Energy

• Outputs– Waste/brine– Air Emissions

• Externalities– Coastal/inland impact– Noise pollution

• So…there are costs as well as benefits

Reverse Osmosis Membrane UnitsSource: Halcrow Water Serviceshttp://www.hwsdesalination.com/Membrane%20Desalination.html

Ashkelon Desalination Plant

• Largest Seawater RO plant in the world• A cost of $220,000,000 to construct • 100 mcm capacity• Drinking water at a price of approximately

2.6 NIS ($0.57 USD) per cubic meter • BOT principle• Eventually desalination will provide

approximately 15 percent of Israel’s household water supply.

The Benefits of Desalination

• Good quality cheap drinking water

• A technological option for augmenting water shortages

• Can ameliorate water conflicts– Water needs versus water rights

International Water Transfers: Israel and the Palestinians

Another Example: The Dead Sea is

Shrinking

Shoreline in 1984

Shoreline today

Technological optimism: Desalination to the Rescue

The Red-Dead Canal or Peace Conduit

The Red-Dead Canal or Peace Conduit

But…What About the Costs?• Desalination is energy costly

– Air emissions• Waste products

– Highly saline brine– Plume density– Chemicals– Temperature (MSF)

• Site of discharge• Plant location

– Large– Coast is crowded and over developed

• Interactions– Other users of the coast (tourism, fisheries)

• Public Disturbances– Noise

Management Goal

Social/cultural

Communication/

Consultation

Management Decision

Mitigation Technology

Economics

Weighting

Politics Risk Assessment

Critical Nature of Project

An Integrated Approach is Required

Source: Hull, R., Belluck, D. Lipchin, C. (2005) A Framework for Multi-Criteria Decision-Making With Special Reference to Critical Infrastructure. In: Ecotoxicology, Ecological Risk Assessment and Multiple Stressors (Arapsis, G., Goncharova, N., Baveye, P. eds.). Springer, Netherlands

An Integrated Approach is Required

• Desalination is supply oriented– Status quo is maintained i.e.: water for agriculture– No need to confront the public

• What about demand management?• Other water reuse options?• Rethink water policy in the region

– Agriculture– Industry– Domestic– Nature

• Desalination’s contribution to ME cooperation must be carefully explored– Needs versus rights– Technological optimism– Affordability– Environmental impact– Alternatives

An Integrated Approach is Required

Source: Walk Against Warming, Sydney Australia, Dec. 3rd 2005http://www.walkagainstwarming.org/