"Positive Conditions" - The Water Crisis in
Gaza
By Alice Gray
08/09/06 "Information
Clearing House" -- -- The political rhetoric and
frequent violence of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict often
serve to mask underlying environmental issues which, if not
resolved, may pose an even greater threat to the well-being of
the Palestinian population than the guns and bombs of the
military occupation. Environmental degradation threatens to
undermine the viability of any future Palestinian state and
create conditions that will make life in many parts of the
Palestinian Territories impossible. Many environmental problems
are accelerated and exacerbated by Occupation practices, which
prevent effective environmental management. This problem is
particularly acute in Gaza in relation to the water resources
and the ongoing military conflict.
The roots of Gaza's water problem lie in the over-population of
the area due to a high influx of refugees in 1948, when
approximately 200 000 people fled to Gaza from the Jaffa and
Beersheva areas of what is now Israel following Israel's War of
Independence. The original population of the Gaza Strip at that
time was 80 000 people, thus this represented an increase of
some 250 %. Today, over three quarters of the estimated Gazan
population of 1.4 million are registered refugees (UNRWA,
2006).
The Gaza Strip is a very small area of land with a total area of
only 360 km2. It is underlain by a shallow aquifer,
which is contiguous with the Israeli Coastal Aquifer to the
north. Gaza is the 'downstream user' of the Coastal Aquifer
system, and hence water abstraction in Gaza does not affect
Israeli water supplies. The Gaza Aquifer has a natural recharge
rate of approximately 65 million cubic metres (MCM) of water per
year from rainfall and lateral inflow of water from Israel and
Egypt (CAMP, 2000).
This aquifer is essentially the only source of fresh water in
the Gaza Strip. By 1967, when Israel occupied Gaza, the
sustainable yield of the aquifer was being fully utilized
(Nasser, 2003). Since then, as the population has grown, so too
has the demand for fresh water. No serious attempt was made at
exercising any water management strategy in the Gaza Strip
during the Israeli administration, with the number of registered
wells increasing from 1200 in 1967 to 2100 in 1993 (Nasser,
2003). Abstraction from the aquifer was approximately 110 MCM
per year by 1993, resulting in falling water levels and
degrading water quality due to seawater infiltration, caused by
the over-pumping that had been taking place. Likewise, there
was little investment in maintaining or improving the
deteriorating water infrastructures of Palestinian
municipalities during this period, despite taxes being payed by
Palestinians to the Israeli government (World Bank, 1993).
In 1994, the Gaza-Jericho agreement placed water resources in
the Gaza Strip under the control of the newly formed Palestinian
Authority and in 1995 the Palestinian Water Authority (PWA) was
formed and given the mandate for managing water in the
Palestinian Territories. At this time it was widely recognized
that there was a serious environmental problem with the Gaza
Aquifer, with experts predicting that if nothing was done, the
entire aquifer would become unusable by the year 2000 (Bleier,
1994). In addition, the water infrastructure was in a very poor
state, with 50 % of water being lost through leaking pipes (PWA,
2003). Therefore the PWA, with the help of international donors
(principally the United States Agency for International
Development - USAID), set out to develop a management strategy
for the Gaza Aquifer and engaged the engineering firm Metcalf &
Eddy to carry out an environmental survey and draw up a
management plan. The Integrated Coastal Aquifer Management Plan
(CAMP) was drawn up in 2000, with an implementation period of 20
years.

Map of the water resources of
Israel/Palestine, and water utilization along the Jordan River.
From the Palestinian Academic Society for the study of
International Affairs (PASSIA) 2002 (www.passia.org).
The main components of the CAMP included reducing the amount of
water pumped from the aquifer for agricultural irrigation whilst
simultaneously improving supply of drinking water to the
population by providing additional water from sources other than
the Aquifer. These included import of water from Israel,
construction of seawater desalination plants and improving
wastewater treatment to allow it to be used for irrigation and
managed aquifer recharge. It was envisaged that, in the longer
term, following a political settlement with Israel and
resolution of the Palestinians' water rights in the West Bank, a
pipeline could be constructed between the West Bank and Gaza to
ensure adequate supplies for the growing population.
If implemented on schedule, it was expected that the CAMP would
bring the Gaza Aquifer back into a positive water balance by
2007, whereas "failure to implement the CAMP in accordance
with the schedule will result in continuing decline in the
quantity and quality of the aquifer water " (CAMP, 2000).
Unfortunately, completion of the CAMP (May, 2000) narrowly
preceded the outbreak of the Al Aqsa Intifada in September
2000. Despite initial attempts to implement the plan, and small
progress in some areas, little has been achieved since then.
The number of agricultural wells, many of them unregistered, has
increased to approximately 4000 (PCBS, 2004); the supply of
water from Israel has declined by approximately half from 1998
to 2004 in breach of the Oslo Accords (WaSH MP, 2005);
construction of the planned regional desalination plant halted
in 2003 when one of the workers was killed; and Gaza's
wastewater treatment facilities are still vastly inadequate with
80 % of sewage being discharged untreated into the environment (UNEP,
2003).
In addition, missile strikes and ground incursions have
repeatedly damaged and destroyed pipelines, and maintenance
personnel have been arrested, shot at or even killed whilst
trying to carry out repairs (E-WaSH 2002). Inadequate sewage
treatment infrastructure and damage to wastewater and drinking
water pipelines has allowed sewage water to contaminate drinking
water supplies, leading to sharp increases in water borne
diseases in many areas. Failure to control over-pumping has led
to sea-water intrusion into the aquifer to the extent that, in
2003, only 10 % of the wells produced water of World Health
Organization (WHO) drinking water standards (UNEP, 2003). Most
recently, this years' Israeli invasion of Gaza (Operation Summer
Rain, June 2006) has caused untold damage to water
infrastructure, with destruction of the Gaza Electric Station
affecting the operation of the majority of wells, pumping
stations and sewage treatment facilities (CMWU, 2006).
In short, Gaza teeters on the brink of a humanitarian and
environmental catastrophe and urgent action is required to
prevent widespread suffering. To compound matters, USAID have
recently pulled out of the Palestinian water sector, abandoning
ongoing projects and closing their contactors' offices, in an
international aid embargo aimed at undermining the Hamas
government. As has proved to be the case with so many
international sanctions and embargoes (like Iraq for example),
the result of this move is the communal punishment of every man,
woman and child in the country targeted. It is a clumsy, inept
and immoral means of pressuring the government to fall into
line; and primarily hurts the most vulnerable members of the
society.
The options for improving the water situation in Gaza remain
effectively unchanged since 2000. Namely, additional supplies
must be made available: through desalination, wastewater
treatment and reuse, import from Israel, or import from the West
Bank. Currently, the unstable conditions in the Gaza Strip make
large scale engineering projects impossible to implement. The
less technically difficult options of water import from Israel
or the West Bank are loaded with political implications and
complexities. Both require the cooperation of Israel to ensure
their implementation as additional pipelines would need to be
constructed, and in the first case, the Israeli water company,
Mekorot, would have to supply the water; whereas in the second,
a pipeline would have to be constructed across Israeli territory
and furthermore, an agreement would have to be reached on
Palestinian water rights in the West Bank.
The water situation in the West Bank is almost the exact inverse
of Gaza, in that there are relatively abundant water resources
in the Mountain Aquifer system and Jordan River, but there is
very little access to or sovereignty over them. This is due to
the fact that Palestinians have been denied any access to the
Jordan River waters since 1967, and 80 % of the Mountain Aquifer
water is utilized by Israel, which is downstream of the West
Bank in terms of water usage. Thus control over water resources
was very tight during the Israeli administration (1967 – 1995),
with only 23 licenses being granted for new wells, and the
number of working wells in fact decreasing from 413 in 1967 to
300 by 1983 (Nasser, 2003). Many communities in the West Bank
currently suffer from severe water shortages, and 13 % of the
West Bank population are not connected to any form of water
network (WaSH MP, 2005). The Oslo Agreements of the 1990s
deferred definition of Palestinian water rights in the West Bank
to final status negotiations, which have not yet taken place.
Thus resolution of Palestine's water problems is utterly
dependent on cooperation from Israel; and inaction will lead to
a serious environmental disaster in Gaza and to continued
suffering for many water starved communities in the West Bank.
Water shortage also undermines the agricultural sector and
prevents it from developing, with consequences for the food
security and economic well-being of the Palestinian population.
In short, access to adequate water supplies underpins the
viability of life in the Palestinian Territories.
When considering the likelihood of cooperation being forthcoming
from Israel, it is worth reviewing several statements that have
been made by Israel's leaders in recent years. Yitzak Rabin,
the architect of the Oslo Peace Process stated in 1974, during
his tenure as Israeli Minister of Defense stated that:
"Israel will create in the
course of the next 10 or 20 years conditions which would attract
natural and voluntary migration of the refugees from the Gaza
Strip and the West Bank to Jordan." (Yitzak Rabin, former Labor
Party Prime Minister)
It may be that he had changed
his mind by the time he made the historic move of shaking hands
with Yasser Arafat and legitimizing the Palestinian Authority.
It is possible, although various features of the Oslo Accords,
such as the minimal transfer of sovereignty over environmental
resources would suggest otherwise. It is possible. No-one can
tell what Israel and Palestine would have looked like today if
Rabin had not been assassinated by a far right Jewish
extremist. However, if Rabin no longer believed in transfer of
the West Bank and Gazan populations, Ariel Sharon, architect of
the Gaza Disengagement Plan certainly did:
"It is the duty of Israeli
leaders to explain to public opinion, clearly and courageously,
a certain number of facts that are forgotten with time. The
first of these is that there is no Zionism, colonization or
Jewish state without the eviction of the Arabs and the
expropriation of their lands." (Ariel Sharon, former Likud Party
Prime Minister, Agence France Press, November 15, 1998).
"You don’t simply bundle
people onto trucks and drive them away. I prefer to advocate a
positive policy, to create, in effect, a condition that in a
positive way will induce people to leave." (Ariel Sharon, August
24, 1988)
Olmert, Sharon's heir, has
also recently avowed his commitment to the ideal of 'Eretz
Israel':
"Only a person in whose
soul Eretz Yisrael burns knows the pain of letting go of our
ancestral heritage" (Ehud Olmert, May 4th 2006,
speech to the Knesset whilst presenting the Unilateral
Disengagement Plan)
"I believed, and to this
day still believe, in our people’s eternal and historic right to
this entire land." (Ehud Olmert, Israeli Prime Minister, to the
US House of Representatives, June 2006)
What can be perceived here is
that many of Israel's leaders, whilst appearing to make
concessions to the Palestinians, have in fact retained an
ideological commitment to 'Eretz Israel from the river to the
sea', and have concentrated their policy towards creating 'facts
on the ground' that will make life for the Palestinians
impossible, hence creating the 'positive conditions' required to
induce people to leave. A close examination of the Gazan water
crisis illustrates this point very well. If nothing is done,
there will be no usable water resources in Gaza and it will
become impossible to live there. Nothing can be done without
Israeli cooperation. Thus whilst Israel may not have
intentionally set out to create the Gaza water crisis, it fits
in rather well with Zionist expansionist aspirations to
perpetuate the situation and prevent meaningful action being
taken to resolve it.
If one examines the process
that is taking place in the West Bank, whereby a series of
Bantustans are being created through land confiscation,
settlement expansion and the building of the 'Separation
Barrier', with the population becoming ever more urbanized and
access to resources such as water and land becoming ever more
restricted, it is possible to see that what in effect is
happening is the creation of a number of 'mini Gazas'. To
illustrate this point: the building of the Wall in the north of
the West Bank led to the destruction of 25 wells and the
isolation of 50 more (WaSH MP 2004), isolating many localities
from their only source of water and destroying the irrigated
farming industry. One
estimate anticipates that when completed, the Wall will isolate
Palestinians from 65 % of their water resources (CAABU, 2003),
although so much uncertainty surrounds its final route that no
solid predictions can be made. Thus a number of highly
urbanized communities will be created, with poor economic and
social conditions and inadequate resources to sustain
themselves. This is the manifestation of Sharon's "positive
policy", which essentially amounts to ethnic cleansing by other
means, causing widespread suffering, illness and death.
Palestinian
water resources, the Separation Barrier and the Eastern
Segregation Zone (ARIJ GIS, 2005)
It is clear that the
viability of the Palestinian state and the livelihoods of the
Palestinian people are being systematically undermined. The
situation is not yet so far gone that it is irreversible.
However, given the
advantages to Israel of allowing the current state of affairs to
persist, and the urgency of immediate action to avert
catastrophe in Gaza, it is clear that international intervention
is required to protect the human rights of the Palestinian
people and prevent humanitarian and environmental disaster. The
current violent conflict in the region should not blind us to
the pressing need to address underlying environmental issues,
which have the potential to cause as much, indeed possibly much
greater suffering, than direct military actions.
References:
UNRWA (2006) The Gaza Refugees -
http://www.un.org/unrwa/refugees/gaza.html United Nations
Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees.
CAMP (2000) Integrated Aquifer
Management Plan, Coastal Aquifer Management Program. Metcalf &
Eddy in cooperation with the Palestinian Water Authority (PWA).
United States Agency for International Development, May 2000.
Nasser Y (2003) Palestinian
Water Needs and Rights in the Context of Past and Future
Development. In Water in Palestine: Problems – Politics
– Prospects. Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of
International Affairs (PASSIA), Jerusalem.
PCBS (2004)
– Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics
http://www.pcbs.gov.ps
World Bank (1993) Developing the
Occupied Territories – An Investment in Peace. Washington, USA,
1993.
Bleier R (1994) Israel's
Appropriation of Arab Waters: an Obstacle to Peace. Middle East
Labor Bulletin, 1994.
PWA (2003) Quantities of Water
Supply in the West Bank Governorates. Directorate General of
Resources and Planning, Palestinian Water Authority.
E-WaSH (2002) 'Nablus Water
Situation', 'Ramallah Water Situation', Tulkarm Water
Situation'; Internal Reports; 14th April 2002.
Emergency Water, Sanitation and Health Committee.
WaSH MP (2004) Water for Life:
Israeli Assault on Palestinian Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
during the Intifada. Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Monitoring
Project (WaSH MP), Palestinian Hydrology Group (PHG).
WaSH MP (2005) Water for Life:
Continued Israeli Assault on Palestinian Water, Sanitation and
Hygiene during the Intifada. Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
Monitoring Project (WaSH MP), Palestinian Hydrology Group (PHG).
UNEP (2003) Desk Study on the
Environment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories. United
Nations Environment Programme, 2003.
CAABU (2003) Fact Sheet:
'Israel's Security Wall: It's Impact on Palestinian
Communities.' Council for the Advancement of Arab-British
Understanding, October, 2003.
CMWU (2006) Latest Situation
Report about Water and Wastewater Due to Prevailing Security
Conditions. Coastal Municipalities Water Utility, July 4th
2006, Gaza, Palestine.
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