SEMIDE Système Euro-Méditerranéen d'Information sur les savoir-faire dans le Domaine de l'Eau

Water Context 11/12
Last update: 2008-01-04

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Israel Water Context

  1. Abstract – Introduction
  2. Geographic Background
  3. Water Consumption
  4. The Water Sources
  1. Rainfall
  2. Surface Water
  3. The Coastal Aquifer
  4. The Kinneret Basin
  1. The Mountain Aquifer
  2. Small Basins
  3. The Water Conveyance System
  4. Alternative Water Sources

11.  The Water Conveyance System

Israel's water management is based mainly on rains, most of which fall in the northern half of the country. The water, which is required for drinking and for agriculture throughout the country, must be transported from the northern to the central and southern parts of the country. Already in the 1960s the directors of the Israeli water economy were wise enough to establish a country-wide network for transporting water. The basis of the transport system is the national carrier, which pumps water from the Kinneret and conveys it in channels and closed pipelines as far as the northern Negev. Smaller local projects are connected to the national carrier, thus a water transport network is created that enables supplying water when needed to almost every settlement in the country, as far as Sede Boqer in the south. The water is supplied to the southern Negev and Arava settlements by a separate regional transport system, which is based on local boreholes and desalination of saline water. The national water transport system connects the three main water sources of the country: Lake Kinneret, the Yarqon-Taninim basin, and the coastal aquifer, and supplies the water to consumers in the Haifa area, the coastal plain, Jerusalem and the northern Negev.

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