Gaza City – Water in the Gaza Strip is mostly undrinkable and loaded with health hazards.
Large-scale desalination plants, funded by international donors and private businesses struggling to mitigate the crisis, are in full swing in the besieged Palestinian enclave. But a new high-tech effort is coming from an unlikely source: a company based in Israel.
Israel’s crippling 14-year blockade has worsened the water disaster facing Gaza residents, with key materials and equipment needed to produce potable water withheld from the coastal enclave.
A Russian-Israeli billionaire – shocked by images of children filling water in plastic containers from a street vendor – decided to act.
Michael Mirilashvili, the billionaire businessman, owns a company called Watergen, which produces clean drinking water from the air through solar-powered technology.
Mirilashvili’s Israel-based company donated three machines to Gaza after seeing the plight of his Palestinian neighbours.
He told Al Jazeera the drinking water crisis in Gaza had affected him personally. “We want every child there to have access to the best-quality drinking water,” he said.
The project is nowhere near able to cover the water demand for Gaza’s two million residents, but “it can help in the long term to solve the water problem”, said Fathi Sheikh-Khalil, Gaza branch manager of Palestinian NGO Damor for Community Development, which helped bring two of the water generators to the territory.
A Palestinian girl fills a container with water from a public tap in the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza [Mohammed Salem/Reuters]
Gaza’s main source of water is an aquifer, but the World Bank warned last year that 97 percent of the groundwater is non-potable. Overuse of the aquifer has allowed seawater, which was largely polluted by sewage treated partly or not at all over the years, to seep into the underground water, increasing the levels of both salinity and contamination.
The few well-off residents rely on imported bottled water and the dwindling middle-class has water purifiers at their kitchens. But with half of the population, one million people, living below the poverty line, the only solution left is to buy water from trucks touring the Gaza Strip all day long. However, two-thirds of this water is already contaminated when it is delivered, according to the United Nations’ children agency UNICEF.
Gaza needs more than 200 million cubic metres of waters annually. Experts see desalinating seawater as the most viable solution. Three desalination plants funded by the international community, including the UN and the European Union, produce about 13 million cubic metres of water per year. The most ambitious project is to build a central desalination facility with a capacity of 55 million cubic metres in the coming year.
Acute power shortages that have characterised life in Gaza over the past 14 years have been an enormous hurdle to resolve the water crisis. For every…
Read more:: Solar technology assists Gaza’s contaminated-water emergency | Gaza News
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