High Radioactive Content Found in Jordanian Groundwater

radioactive

The Middle East is pretty thirsty right now.  Headlines from all over the region chronicle the increasingly serious drought conditions affecting agriculture, industry, and health.

Unfortunately, new research from the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Science & Technology adds reason for even more concern. In their study, “High Naturally Occurring Radioactivity in Fossil Groundwater from the Middle East,” Duke University’s Avner Vengosh and colleagues from Israel, Jordan, and the Palestinian Territories found that fossil groundwater in southern Jordan contains levels of radioactive radium isotopes up to 2000% higher than international drinking water standards!

In an email to New Security Beat, Dr. Vengosh wrote:

Most of the Jordanian population is not using the fossil water for drinking—for now. Only few thousand people in Aqaba and Karak might be currently exposed to this water. However, Jordan has launched a huge water project to transfer the water from the aquifer in the south to the capital Amman, which would expose a large population to this water.”

With freshwater resources rapidly declining, many Middle Eastern countries have turned to nonrenewable aquifers like these to meet their water demands.  These findings therefore present a potentially enormous public health challenge both to Jordan and to other countries like Saudi Arabia, Egypt, and Libya who have similar aquifer systems; according to Dr. Vengosh, exposure to much lower levels of radium isotopes led to increased instances of bone cancer in a New Jersey community.

:: New Security Beat

Image: wired.lain

For more on the water crisis in the Middle East:
Analyzing the Middle East Water Crisis: In Israel, Jordan and Beyond

Drought in Jordan Calls People to Pray for Rain and the Controversial Dead-Red Peace Canal

Syria Suffers Water Shortage – More News on Middle Eastern Drought



Rachel Bergstein
Rachel Bergsteinhttps://www.greenprophet.com/
When her vegan summer camp counselor explained to a fifteen-year-old Rachel how the dairy industry pollutes the groundwater in poor rural communities and causes global warming, there was no turning back. Her green fire lit, Rachel became increasingly passionate about the relationship between human societies and the natural environment, particularly about the systemic injustices associated with environmental degradation. After snagging a B.A. in Peace and Justice Studies at the University of Maryland, where she wrote an undergraduate thesis on water injustice in Israel/Palestine and South Africa, Rachel was awarded the New Israel Fund/Shatil’s Rabbi Richard J. Israel Social Justice Fellowship to come and spread the green gospel in Israel for the 2009-2010 academic year. She currently interns for Friends of the Earth Middle East in their Tel Aviv office. When Rachel is not having anxiety about her ecological footprint, carbon and otherwise, she can be found in hot pursuit of the best vegetarian food Tel Aviv has to offer. She also blogs about her experience as an NIF fellow and environmentalist in Israel at organichummus.wordpress.com. Rachel can be reached at rachelbergstein (at) gmail (dot) com.
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