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Article: Israel, Jordan Find Accord in Finding New Water Supplies; Controversial Projects Include Network Linking the Dead Sea and the Red Sea
- Article from:
- The Washington Post
- Article date:
- September 5, 2009
- Author:
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An acute water shortage has prompted Jordan and Israel to embark
on audacious water-supply projects that supporters say will prevent
an impending regional crisis but environmentalists have criticized
as ill-advised attempts to rewire nature.
The efforts include a pipeline to Amman from the Dissi Reservoir
in Jordan's southern desert and an extensive network of
desalination plants Israel is building along the Mediterranean
coast. The Dissi is an ancient, nonrenewable, underground pool of
water that, once tapped, will run dry in an estimated 50 years.
Most controversially, the two countries are pushing for action on
the long-standing idea of cutting a 110-mile path north from the Red
Sea ...