"Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinian environmentalists are challenging a World Bank-administered plan to revive the dying Dead Sea by linking it to the Red Sea.
A group of Israeli, Jordanian and Palestinian environmentalists have put politics aside to fight a $15 billion World Bank plan to revive the Dead Sea, which is dropping by about three feet a year. The bank's plan proposes building a canal or tunnel to link the salt-laden sea to the Red Sea in the south.
It may look calm, but the Dead Sea is shrinking rapidly and there's a battle brewing among those who hope to save it.
The environmentalists, members of Friends of the Earth Middle East (FOEME), along with prominent businesses like Israel's Dead Sea Works, believe the canal could destroy the sea's fragile and unique ecosystem.
The Dead Sea, one of the saltiest bodies of water on the planet, is bordered by Israel, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority. While it doesn't support marine life, it is bursting with minerals and salts which provide healing therapies for people suffering from cystic fibrosis to psoriasis." (source)
Search
Popular Posts
-
On the 1st April 2015, Iraqi born British Pro-Israel activist Orim Shimshon came to visit Israel and we invited him to give a talk to a roo...
-
NOTICE: This article I submitted won in the quarter-finals of the Pro-Israel blog-off competition . When we seek information on new techn...
-
"Between 1920 and 1970, 900,000 Jews were expelled from Arab and other Muslim countries. The 1940s were a turning point in this tragedy...
Blog Archive
- April 2015 (1)
- July 2014 (1)
- June 2014 (4)
- May 2014 (9)
- April 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (1)
- June 2012 (1)
- April 2012 (1)
- February 2012 (4)
- January 2012 (1)
- October 2011 (1)
- September 2011 (3)
- July 2011 (28)
- June 2011 (26)
- May 2011 (10)
- April 2011 (10)
- March 2011 (6)
- January 2011 (6)
- December 2010 (14)
- November 2010 (325)
- October 2010 (537)
- September 2010 (722)
- August 2010 (826)
- July 2010 (811)
- June 2010 (1083)
- May 2010 (15)
- April 2010 (5)
- March 2010 (4)
- February 2010 (3)