NATO Science for Peace Supports Desalination Water Project Between Jordan and Israel

desalination middle east jordan israelThe NATO Science for Peace Program and the Middle East Desalination Research Center (MEDRC) recently awarded grants to researchers at Ben Gurion University of the Negev to continue working on a novel desalination method.  In a region where potable water sources are so scarce, these methods are crucial to water independence and reducing reliance upon imported water sources (which require a lot of fossil fuels).

The team, lead by Dr. Jack Gilron (Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research) and Professor Eli Korin (Department of Chemical Engineering), has developed a desalination method by reverse osmosis that exploits “the finite kinetics of membrane fouling processes by periodically changing the conditions leading to membrane fouling before it can occur.”

The Ben Gurion team will be working in collaboration with colleagues at the Hashemite University of Jordan and the University of Colorady in order to further develop the technology and set up pilot desalination sites in Israel and Jordan.

Dr. Gilron has explained that “the process will be tuned to reduce brine volumes to 50%-33% of those generated in conventional RO [reverse osmosis].  This greatly reduces the environmental burden and improves the economics of the inland desalination process… Water scarcity and the need to develop new water resources for populations not on the seacoasts are driving efforts to desalinate brackish water and municipal wastewater with ever-increasing efficiencies.”

In light of the ways in which water issues and environmental problems unbiasedly effect all Middle East inhabitants, it is wonderful to hear of such border-crossing collaborative efforts.

Read more about other collaborative environmental projects::

FoEME to Hold Conference on Shared Mountain Aquifer

Jordanians, Israelis and Palestinians Collaborate to Save the Jordan River

Neighbors’ Paths: Eco-Tourism AND Eco-Peace!

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Karen Chernick
Author: Karen Chernick

Much to the disappointment of her Moroccan grandmother, Karen became a vegetarian at the age of seven because of a heartfelt respect for other forms of life. She also began her journey to understand her surroundings and her impact on the environment. She even starting an elementary school Ecology Club and an environmental newsletter in the 3rd grade. (The proceeds of the newsletter went to non-profit environmental organizations, of course.) She now studies in New York. Karen can be reached at karen (at) greenprophet (dot) com.

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3 thoughts on “NATO Science for Peace Supports Desalination Water Project Between Jordan and Israel”

  1. mika. says:

    In my opinion, any corporation with the Jihadi imperialists is a bad idea. There’s absolutely no rational reason for such corporation, and the de facto recognition it confers on the Jihadi Empire and its various Islamo fiefdoms/thiefdoms.

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