Shrinking Dead Sea
Faces Fight to Survive
June 09, 2006 — By Tali Caspi, Reuters
EIN GEDI, Israel — These days, a cart
takes visitors from Israel's Ein Gedi resort to the edge of the Dead Sea.
Twenty years ago, tourists stepped right onto the shore.
The Dead Sea, the lowest point on the Earth's surface, is shrinking as its
salty waters rapidly dry up.
With no clear solution to the problem, environmentalists and tourist
businesses are worried.
"Every time I come here the beach is further and further away. One day
there will only be a puddle left," says Gidon Bromberg, of the
environmental group Friends of the Earth, Middle East.
Too salty to sustain life, the Dead Sea is a draw for tourists who come to
float in its greasy-feeling buoyant brine. Devotees also believe its
waters and the mud at the margins are good for the skin.
The Dead Sea has been shrinking for decades as the inflow dwindles from
its main source, the Jordan River.
Israel, Jordan and Syria rely on the river and its tributaries to meet the
needs of increasing populations and agriculture in the arid region, and
diversions have slowed the biblical river to a muddy trickle.
Mineral extraction industries have also played a part by helping to
accelerate evaporation.
SINKHOLES
The Dead Sea has fallen over 66 feet in the past 100 years and is now
losing about 3 feet each year.
As the water level has fallen, it has caused thousands of sinkholes to
open up on land. The Ein Gedi resort closed some campsites after a 10-foot
hole opened up under someone's feet. Some holes are even deeper.
"The ground is falling out from underneath us, literally," said Ein Gedi
resident Gedi Hampe.
The Dead Sea is not expected to disappear entirely because it is fed by
underground water sources and winter rainfall. As it shrinks, it also gets
more salty, which in turn makes it harder for the remaining water to
evaporate.
Scientists believe that if nothing is done, the water level will drop by
as much as 328 feet more -- almost a third of its current depth.
CANAL PLAN
With that in mind, a World Bank-backed feasibility study is to be carried
out on a plan to build a 125-mile canal to replenish the Dead Sea with
water from the Red Sea to the south.
The idea is that the water would be pumped to a height of 720 feet in the
border area between Israel and Jordan and then flow down to the Dead Sea,
some 1,378 feet below sea level, generating electricity on the way.
But the "Two Seas Canal" plan would cost an estimated $5 billion and the
economics of the project are in question.
Scientists also wonder whether it would really be beneficial for the
environment.
The Dead Sea's unique make-up would be changed forever by introducing sea
water into a body that has only ever been fed by fresh water. While sea
water contains mostly sodium salts, the Dead Sea has much more magnesium
and potassium.
"The cost of the damage that would be caused to the environment may be
greater than any possible benefits," said local geologist Eli Raz. "The
best plan for the Dead Sea is to let the Jordan river flow again, this is
its natural state."
But the chances of that happening are next to nothing given the reliance
of the region's countries on the Jordan's water.
Environmentalists are pushing for the Dead Sea to be declared a World
Heritage Site by the U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization, hoping this will force surrounding countries to come up with
a plan.
"Finally, people have begun to realize the urgency of the situation. It is
so dramatic that it can no longer be ignored," said resident Hampe.
Source: Reuters