Transboundary stream restoration in Israel and the Palestinian Authority

Lior Asaf*, Neta Negaoker, Alon Tal, Jonathan Laronne, Nader Al Khateeb

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Within Israel and the West Bank and Gaza Strip (WBGS), there are 15 streams that cross the Palestinian/Israeli Green Line. All originate in watersheds located in the Palestinian Authority, or in lands that will eventually be outside Israeli jurisdiction, and then flow into Israel toward the Mediterranean Sea, flow east to the Dead Sea, or the Jordan River. These transboundary streams of Israel and Palestine are plagued by severe pollution, posing a serious health hazard to humans and devastating the natural ecosystems. Several factors have contributed to the severity of pollution in these streams. For many years, most streams were transformed into sewage conduits collecting raw sewage or low-quality effluent all year round. The region's climate is semiarid and increasing demand for water has led to overpumping of the available groundwater, drying up of the headwaters of many streams. A range of pollutants, including nonpoint agricultural runoff, urban stormwater, and discharge from industrial sites can also be found in many streams. In 1994, the Ministry of the Environment established the River Restoration Administration as a coordinating body for actions taken by various governmental and nongovernmental bodies to restore or at least rehabilitate damaged streams. Although stream restoration constitutes a paramount environmental priority for both parties, the lack of a clear and relevant model that identifies and quantifies the key parameters for stream restoration including water flow, nutrient concentrations, and other contaminant loadings from nonpoint and point sources on a catchment scale across the virtual borders has frustrated all previous restoration attempts. The ultimate aim of the current research is to lay the foundations for an effective river restoration strategy for Israel and the Palestinian Authority. Using a "catchment scale chemical and biological monitoring network," the total pollution loadings into two transboundary streams whose geographic boundaries cross over the Israeli/Palestinian Green Line (the Zomar/Alexander and Hebron/Besor/Gaza) are to be characterized. This will for the first time enable a more systematic and comprehensive assessment of intervention options, their affect on stream restoration, and relative cost-effectiveness.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationIntegrated Water Resources Management and Security in the Middle East
EditorsClive Lipchin, Eric Pallant, Danielle Saranga, Allyson Amster
Place of PublicationDordrecht, The Netherlands
PublisherSpringer
Pages285-295
Number of pages11
ISBN (Electronic)9781402059865
ISBN (Print)9781402059841, 9781402059858
DOIs
StatePublished - 2007
Externally publishedYes

Publication series

NameNATO Security through Science Series C: Environmental Security
ISSN (Print)1871-4668

Keywords

  • Israel
  • Palestine
  • Stream restoration
  • Water pollution

RAMBI Publications

  • rambi
  • Stream restoration -- Israel
  • Stream restoration -- Palestinian National Authority
  • Water -- Pollution -- Middle East
  • Water resources development -- Middle East -- International cooperation
  • Water-supply -- Middle East

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