Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Red Sea Dead Sea Link



The idea to link the Red Sea to the Dead Sea was originally proposed over 100 years ago.
An ambitious plan to build a pipeline to carry water from the Red Sea to the shrinking Dead Sea lurched forward this month, after the World Bank held hearings to gather public comments on the proposal. But environmentalists charge that alternative plans to save the Dead Sea would be cheaper, more flexible and would have less impact on the region’s ecosystems.

If the project proceeds, a 180-kilometre buried pipeline will carry up to 2 billion cubic metres (m3) of sea water per year from the Gulf of Aqaba on the Red Sea through Jordanian territory to the Dead Sea.

The Dead Sea is world's lowest inland area. Proposals have been put forward to set up the pipeline so that the downward flow of the water goes through a hydroelectric plant that would in turn power a desalination plant, providing up to 850 million m3 of fresh water per year to the parched region. Brine from the desalination plant would be discharged into the already-saline Dead Sea, replenishing water that is evaporating from the lake at a rate of more than 1 metre per year.
Arguably, the linking of the two seas is a good idea but seemingly unlikely to see fruition unless someone can get the competing Mideast personalities and groups to agree -- on something.

1 comment:

  1. I remember reading about this sometime last year and last I heard was Israel needed to or wanted to get Jordan involved.

    Then I never heard any more about it.

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