World

Shrinking Sea of Galilee: Some hope for a miracle

November 13, 2018

By Clothilde Mraffko

EIN GEV, Israel — It was not so long ago when swimmers at Ein Gev would lay out their towels in the grass at the edge of the Sea of Galilee.

Today, they put up their parasols 100 meters (yards) further down, on a sandy beach that has appeared due to the shrinking of the iconic body of water.

“Every time we come we feel an ache in our hearts,” said Yael Lichi, 47, who has been visiting the famous lake with her family for 15 years.

“The lake is a symbol in Israel. Whenever there is a drought, it is the first thing we talk about.”

In front of Lichi, wooden boats with Christian pilgrims aboard navigate the calm waters, among groups from across the world that visit.

The Sea of Galilee, where Christians believe Prophet Jesus (peace be upon him) walked on water, has been shrinking for years, mainly due to overuse, and environmentalists are raising the alarm.

Plans are being devised to resuscitate the freshwater body known to Israelis as the Kinneret and to some as Lake Tiberias.

For Israel, the lake is vital, having long been the country’s main source of water. Israeli newspaper Haaretz provides its water level daily on its back page.

Its shrinking has been a source of deep concern. When two islands appeared recently due to falling water levels, it received widespread attention in the Israeli media.

Since 2013 “we are below the low red line” beyond which “salinity rises, fish have difficulty surviving and vegetation is affected,” said Amir Givati, hydrologist at Israel’s water authority.

The level is only around 20 cm (less than eight inches) above the record low plumbed in 2001 — except, at that time, 400 million cubic meters (14.1 billion cubic feet) a year were pumped out for irrigation.

“This year, we only pumped 20 million cubic meters, but the lake is in a very bad state,” said Givati.

Added to that is the 50 million cubic meters Israel sends to neighboring Jordan as part of peace agreements.

National acquaduct

Israel constructed a national aqueduct in the 1950s in the years after the country’s birth, when it was on a quest for nation-building and sought to “make the desert bloom”, as its early pioneers put it.

The aqueduct carried water from the lake towards the rest of the country.

“Lake Tiberias was used as a national reservoir,” said Julie Trottier, a professor who specializes in Israeli-Palestinian water issues.

A man-made canal supplied water to the west toward the Mediterranean coast and into the Negev desert in the south, she said.

That system has not been in place for some 10 years. Now, most homes in the west of the country use desalinated water from the Mediterranean, while farms are irrigated with water that is duly treated and recycled.

But eastern Israel does not have access to desalinated water, said Orit Skutelsky, of the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel.

Farmers in the region rely on rivers that provide 90 percent of the lake’s input.

Dozens of pumps remove nearly 100 million cubic meters (3.5 billion cubic feet) each year from those sources, whose flow has decreased and is no longer enough to supply the lake, says the researcher.

Several kilometers from the beaches at Ein Gev, at the foot of rocky hills, immense nets cover banana trees whose leaves wilt with the surrounding dry vegetation.

“We call it the valley of bananas,” said Meir Barkan, tourism director for the Ein Gev resort.

“When they began planting trees, there was no water problem and the banana is the only fruit that you harvest year-round.”

‘Really ashamed’

But without desalinated or recycled water, the farms are a main player in the “competition for resources between nature, agriculture and tourism,” said Eran Feitelson, geography professor at occupied Jerusalem’s Hebrew University.

For Lior Avichai, agronomist at the Zemach Nisyonot research center, the solution is not to “kill agriculture and the local economy,” but to use less water.

Authorities propose providing the region with desalinated water via the aqueduct.

Skutelsky said that to better manage the ecosystem, the water should be sent further upstream and then allowed to flow down naturally.

But “that would be very expensive,” said Skutelsky. — AFP


November 13, 2018
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