The Civil Engineering Contractor July 2018 | Page 12

WORLD NEWS The Dead Sea is shrinking by more than one metre a year. Jordan is committed to implementing a Red Sea–Dead Sea Water Conveyance Project, notwithstanding Israeli signals that it is no longer keen on the regional scheme, if it ever was. There are concerns that the project is not economically viable, but proposals as to the scheme have been around for hundreds of years while being often stymied by politics. A Jordanian official warned that Israel’s frequently suggested withdrawal from the project and deliberate creation of stumbling blocks to hold the project back can “only hurt regional stability”. “We are ready to press ahead with the project, but Israel has been repeatedly hindering it for some time now and this is disrupting regional cooperation and undermining the slightest chances for peace in the Middle East,” the source noted. A recent opinion article in The Jerusalem Post suggested that the project had a partisan political agenda, questioning Israel’s need for the project. However, a senior government source contacted by The Jordan Times said that Jordan would go ahead with the Red–Dead project “with or without Israel”. Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian Authority signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) in December 2013 to implement the first phase of the Red–Dead seas project. 12 - CEC July 2018 Under the first phase, a total of 300-million cubic meters (mcm) of seawater would be pumped to the Dead Sea from the Red Sea each year, eventually rising to two-billion cubic meters of seawater. A total of 85–100mcm of water will be desalinated every year, while the seawater will be pumped out from an intake located in the north of the Gulf of Aqaba. A conveyor would be extended to transfer desalinated water and a pipeline installed to dump the brine into the Dead Sea in order to stop its constant decline, estimated at one metre every year. Several articles in Jordanian media have cited officials saying that they do not need Israel for the pipeline, and even raising the possibility of bringing in Saudi Arabia as a partner instead. The R120-billion (USD10-billion) project has long been seen as an early stage in a regional peace deal, which would see the construction of a 220km pipeline transferring water from the Red Sea to the Dead Sea — the lowest body of water on earth — to benefit Israelis, Jordanians, and Palestinians, and replenish the dwindling Dead Sea. Besides providing an annual total of 100mcm of drinking water to Palestinians, Jordanians, and Israelis, the Red–Dead project would produce green energy.