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Waterfall in
northern Israel (Photo: S. Lederhendler |
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Section of
the ancient Roman aqueduct to Caesarea (Photo: M. Horneman) |
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The total annual renewable water resources amount to some 60 billion cubic
feet (1.7 billion cu.m.), of which about 65 percent is used for irrigation and
the balance for urban and industrial purposes. The country's water sources
consist of the Jordan River, Lake Kinneret, and a few small river systems.
Natural springs and underground water tables, tapped in controlled quantities to
prevent depletion and salination, are also utilized.
As maximum use has been made of all freshwater sources, ways are being
developed to exploit marginal water resources through the recycling of waste
brackish water, and desalination of seawater.
To overcome regional imbalances in water availability, most of Israel's
freshwater sources are joined in an integrated grid. Its central artery, the
National Water Carrier, completed in 1964, brings water from the north and
central regions, through a network of giant pipes, aqueducts, open canals,
reservoirs, tunnels, dams and pumping stations, to the semi-arid
south.
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