February 7, '08
'Water is Not Everywhere and Not All Drops for Drinking

(IsraelNN.com) Israel's dwindling water resources are leaving the country with less drinkable water because of ground contamination, the Water Authority's Hydraulic Service has warned. The water in the Coastal Aquifer already is below standards for drinking, it said.

Both the Kinneret and the larger underground aquifer system have been severely depleted because of less than average rain the past several years and growing water consumption. Last year, the rainfall reached near the average but came only after an early winter drought that caused an unusual decrease in the level of the Kinneret because of farmer's needs for irrigation.

The Kinneret now is slightly more than 3.5 meters below the desirable level, one of the lowest levels ever for this time of year. Light rain is expected Thursday night and Friday morning in the north, but dry weather is forecast for all of Israel on the Sabbath and Monday. However, more rain is expected by next Monday or Tuesday.


number227 wrote on Mar 4
We are experiencing a problem here, our city relies heavily on one large dammed up lake, that has sewage pumped into it daily, and to make it worse, the drought has caused levels to drop.
The lake really is the root resource of "life" as we know it, ALL electricity comes from it and ALL water is derived from it, . Only if processed and treated is it anywhere near drinkable!
This seems entirely wrong and unnatural (of course) ... but I hear the big city of Atlanta is having the same issue... Basically they are "praying" for rain this year, but summer is upon us!!

I do worry... and really don't understand the lack of concern from others...
But when you think about it more, there doesn't seem to be a way to change this or reverse it on a mass scale since our whole life systems are built around it...The cities I am speaking of have millions of dependent residents that sprawl out into the surrounding counties.
ilenvironment wrote on Mar 5, edited on Mar 5
It's really a squatter mentality! Allow shack upon shack - high priced at that - without developing an infrastructure to accommodate their "intake" and "output."

Soon they will have the problem the Japanese try to deal with: not enough water for flush toilets.

So why not start a sewage to methane solution as soon as possible!?
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