Israel, Jordan and the PA (Palestinian Authority) on Monday afternoon 6 Teves 5774 in Washington DC, at the headquarters of the World Bank, signed an agreement on laying a water pipeline to link the Red Sea with the Dead Sea.
Regional Cooperation, and National Infrastructures, Energy and Water Minister Silvan Shalom signed for Israel. Water and Irrigation Minister Hazem Al Nasser signed for Jordan. Water Authority Minister Dr. Shaddad Attili signed for the Palestinian Authority.
The pipeline will be 180 kilometers long and will pass through Jordanian territory. It will channel 100 million cubic meters of water per annum northward from the Red Sea and will cost an estimated $300-400 million. A BOT tender for the project will be published in 2014. The pipeline will take an estimated three years to complete. The inflow of water from the Red Sea will slow the drying up of the Dead Sea and its concomitant negative effects.
Approximately 200 million cubic meters of water will be drawn per annum. Around 80 million cubic meters will be desalinated at a facility to be built in Aqaba facility with Israel receiving 30-50 million cubic meters of water for the Aravah region and Eilat, and with Jordan receiving 30 million cubic meters of water for use in the south. Israel will also sell Jordan another 50 million cubic meters of water from the Kinneret for use in the north.
Minister Shalom said, “This is a historic agreement that realizes a dream of many years and the dream of Herzl. The agreement is of the highest diplomatic, economic, environmental and strategic importance.” He added, “I am pleased that an investment of years has reached its hoped-for conclusion and will benefit Israel and the residents of the region as a whole. The other goals of this project are the generation of electricity by utilizing the difference in elevation between the Red Sea and the Dead Sea and the development of tourism infrastructures.”
(YWN – Israel Desk, Jerusalem)
2 Responses
Based on the details contained in this post, can anyone explain to me why it was necessary to have a representative of the P.A. also sign the agreement?
No. 1: The Palestinian Authority has some – authority – over a portion of the region that will be serviced by the proposed pipeline. If the PA never increases its jurisdiction, it is nevertheless appropriate for the PA to be a party to the agreement. And if the PA loses all jurisdiction, for whatever reason, its participation in the agreement will be irrelevant. My explanation is, in effect, a “chicken soup” explanation, i.e., it couldn’t hurt.