Israel, Palestinians and Water Libel (FrontPageMagazine.com) by Jack L. Schwartzwald 04/19/12)
Source: http://frontpagemag.com/2012/04/19/israel-palestinians-and-water-libel/
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On December 13, 2011, the French National Assembly issued a 320-page
report entitled, The Geopolitics of Water, which dedicated 20 pages
to an alleged “water war” between Israelis and Palestinians.
Employing the incendiary terms “apartheid” and “water occupation,”
the report’s lead author, Jean Glavany, accused Israel of usurping
Palestinian water sources and showing favoritism to
450,000 “colonial” settlers who purportedly “use more water than [the
West Bank’s] 2.3 million Palestinians.”
The report won immediate praise from Palestinian Water Authority
Director Shaddad Attili (who made similar allegations in a 2011
Jerusalem Post op-ed). Harper’s Magazine likewise reviewed it
favorably, as did the ever-reliable Counterpunch, which proposed the
delusional hypothesis that Israel’s security barrier “closely follows
the line of the Western Aquifer” as part of a sinister plot to
divert “Palestinian” water to Israel. (Just for the record: (i) the
Western Aquifer discharges most of its water beneath Israeli
territory, where it has been readily accessed since the 1920s; (ii)
the “line” Israel’s security barrier most “closely follows” is that
separating would-be Palestinian terrorists from their intended Jewish
victims; and (iii) Jews living behind this barrier, but beyond the
1949 Green Line, get their water from Israeli — not Palestinian —
sources.)
The mendacious French report is hardly the first word on this
subject. In May 2008, National Geographic gave two thumbs down to
Israel’s life-sustaining desalination plants, pointing out that
fossil fuels are needed to run them (thereby threatening the planet),
that they produce water that is “too pure” (thereby threatening the
integrity of water pipes) and that they are vulnerable to terrorist
attack (not to give anyone any bright ideas). Far worse was a 2009
Guardian “exposé” entitled, “Who will save Gaza’s children?” wherein
Victoria Brittain claimed that Israeli water policy had exposed Gazan
newborns to toxic levels of nitrates, thereby causing
an “exceptionally high” incidence of “blue baby syndrome.” In fact,
the number of cases of “blue baby syndrome” — the lethal form of the
medical condition “methemoglobinemia” — stands at zero. (Although
mild, non-lethal cases of methemoglobinemia have occurred in Gaza,
the high nitrate levels that cause them are attributable to flawed
Palestinian fertilizing methods, not to Israeli water policy.)
Collectively dubbed the “water libel,” by Jerusalem Post blogger,
Petra Marquardt-Bigman, the above reports are unified by their devil-
may-care attitude towards established facts. Relying on Palestinian
Water Authority and Joint Israeli-Palestinian Water Commission
documents, Visser and Shaked have wholly debunked Shaddad Attili’s
accusations. For example, Attili claimed that Israelis consume four
times more water per capita than Palestinians. The reader will reach
the same conclusion — provided he uses Attili’s calculus, which (a)
overestimates Israeli usage per capita by nearly 100% (280 cubic
meters annually versus 150); (b) underestimates Palestinian usage by
more than 50% (60 versus 140) and (c) grossly overestimates the
Palestinian population by counting 400,000 Palestinians living in
Israel (where they use Israel’s water supply), as well as another
400,000 living abroad.
As for the French National Assembly report, it turns out that
Monsieur Glavany systematically evaded essential facts with an aplomb
not seen in his country since the second Dreyfus trial. Moreover, he
interpolated a number of venomous inaccuracies into the report at the
11th hour without notifying his co-authors, all of whom disavowed his
claims on reviewing the final text.
So what precisely are the facts? A useful starting point would be to
mention that under Jordanian rule prior to 1967, only 1 in 10 West
Bank households were connected to running water, and that today,
owing to Israeli water policy, the figure stands at 96% (and will
soon rise to 98.5%.). Secondly, Palestinians steal Israeli water
(not the other way around as alleged by Attili and Glavany), while
Israel exports volumes to the West Bank greatly in excess of what is
mandated by the Oslo Accords. (Israel does so primarily to
compensate for the Palestinian Water Authority’s repetitive failure
to implement approved water projects and its substandard maintenance
and security procedures, which result in the loss of an estimated 33%
of the Palestinian water allotment annually.)Mainly because it
doesn’t waste time on such mundane tasks as developing and
maintaining its water resources, the PWA and its director have
abundant time to level false charges against Israel. And mainly
because Israelis aren’t doing any of the things of which they stand
accused, they’ve had abundant time to work on the region’s very real
water crisis. Indeed, they’ve been working on it since before Israel
was a state. It was the Jewish community that drained the swamps of
Mandatory Palestine’s coastal plain in the 1920s in order to access
springs from the Western Aquifer which lay beneath. In 1937, this
same community founded the Mekerot (or national water company).
Since that time, they’ve attacked the water problem from multiple
angles. For example, “drip irrigation” methods pioneered by Israel
in the 1960s, deliver water to plant roots with an efficiency
approaching 80% (double the rate seen with open irrigation), and
newer “sub-surface irrigation” techniques do even better. Because
the country is mostly arid, Israel built its National Water Carrier
(1964) to transport water from areas of higher rainfall near Lake
Kinneret to the parched Negev, thereby transforming desert areas into
productive agricultural land. Israel recycles 75% of its wastewater
(6x the rate of its nearest competitor), and employs the recovered
water in agriculture. They have developed airborne drones that
detect leaks in water pipes via water meter alarm systems and
a “curapipe” process that seals “pinhole” leaks before they are even
detectable. Hi-tech “SmarTap” faucets reduce household water
consumption by 30% with patrons scarcely noticing.
Israel’s most ambitious program, however, is its “Desalination Master
Plan.” Initiated in 2000, its goal was to build state-of-the-
art “reverse osmosis” desalination plants along the Mediterranean
coast capable of producing 400 million cubic meters of potable water
annually by 2005. (By 2020, the figure is projected to be 750
million cubic meters). The first reverse osmosis plant — then the
largest of its kind worldwide — opened in Ashkelon in 2005 with a
capacity to produce 100 million cubic meters annually at a cost of 52
cents per cubic meter. (Natural drinking water actually costs more
since it must be processed.) A second plant opened in Hadera in
2010, and when the Soreq and Ashdod plants go on-line in 2013,
Israel’s desalination plants will account for 85% of Israel’s
household water consumption and turn the state into a water exporter.
Abroad, Israeli technology companies have built more than 400
desalination plants in 40 countries. India has embarked on a pilot
project relying on Israeli expertise, and China has signed a deal
with Israel’s IDE technologies to build a “Green” desalination plant
that desalinates via evaporation and condensation.
While Palestinians blame Israel, Israelis work on innovative
solutions. This March, the Palestinian Water Authority petitioned
the World Water Forum to fund a $450 million desalination plant in
Gaza. Within 24 hours, Israel offered to lend its expertise to the
project. Perhaps an Israeli-Palestinian “water war” is occurring –
but it isn’t being waged by Israel.
Jack Schwartzwald is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Medicine at
Brown University and author of Nine Lives of Israel (McFarland,
2012). (Copyright © 2012 FrontPageMagazine.com 04/19/12)
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