1 / 23

“Thirsting for Justice” Israel’s control of water in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

“Thirsting for Justice” Israel’s control of water in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. World Water Day 2013.

parry
Télécharger la présentation

“Thirsting for Justice” Israel’s control of water in the Occupied Palestinian Territory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. “Thirsting for Justice” Israel’s control of water in the Occupied Palestinian Territory World Water Day 2013

  2. -Myth: the climate in Israel/Palestine is arid; Israel is « making the desert bloom»-Reality: the region is rich in water; the water shortages in the OPT are the result of Israeli policies

  3. Palestine has enough water Clemens Messerschmid

  4. CONTROL Israel retains control over all sources of water in the West Bank and retains significant control over water resources in Gaza Israel extracts close to 90 per cent of the water from the aquifer underneath the West Bank Palestinians have no access to the Jordan River

  5. Between 1967 and 1995 Israel takes control over all water resources through series of military orders Ariel Sharon hands over Palestinian water infrastructure to Mekorot for value of x shekels (guess!) Consequences to Palestinians: • Only 23 licenses issued for new Palestinian wells • Number of wells reduce from 413 in 1967 to 300 in 1983 Result: De-development of Palestinians water sector & human induced water scarcity

  6. 1995 Oslo II: greater Palestinians dependency on IsraelInterim Agreement= 5 years Oslo quantities allocated to Palestinians haven’t been met, Palestinians extract less water today than they did before Oslo.

  7. Contrast with Israeli settlements Average water consumption: Palestinians: 50-70 lpcpd Israelis: 300 lpcpd (settlers at 369 lpcpd) WHO recommended: 100 lpcpd Large discrepancies within same area: Prime beneficiaries of appropriation of shared water resources are Israeli citizens, settlers in particular, at the expense of Palestinians Figures by BTselem

  8. The West Bank

  9. Permits “blackmail” Large water infrastructure projects in the West Bank require Joint Water Committee (JWC) approval. Israel conditions approval of essential Palestinian projects to Palestinian approval of settlement projects. Result: • Aprox. 200 000 people with no connection to the water network paying up to 400 % more for every liter of water than those connected • Only one Palestinian-operated wastewater treatment plant • Less than a third of the communities in the West Bank are connected to the sewerage network, with the remainder dependent on self-installed cesspits and septic tanks

  10. Area C: settlers represented in planning committees deciding on fate of Palestinian communities • West Bank • Between 2009 and 2011 the Israeli military has destroyed: • 173 water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) structures in the West Bank including: • •57rainwater collection cisterns. • • 40 wells supplying communities with water. • • Irrigation equipment vital for food production and at least 20 toilets and sinks Water infrastructure demolition rates in 2012 have persisted. Denial of access to water trigger for displacement, particularly in areas slated for settlement expansion (Jordan Valley, south Hebron hills)

  11. Cistern demolition in the south Hebron hills

  12. Consequences of settlements on access to water Settlement infrastructure has been planned to take into account expropriation of water resources. Route of the wall takes into account key catchment areas for future extractions from strategic western aquifer Violent actions from Israeli settlers have restricted or denied Palestinian access to water resources (springs) Several Israeli settlements in the West Bank do not treat their wastewater

  13. Settlements trade: profiting from Palestinian water appropriation Agriculture is main source of income for Israeli settlements in West Bank Agricultural settlements, particularly those in the Jordan Valley, rely on their own water wells inside the West Bank operated by Mekorot. Some wells owned and operated by private agricultural export company Mehadrin. The approx 9,400 Israeli settlers in the West Bank consume the equivalent of a third of the water consumed by 2.6 million Palestinians Water for agriculture subsidized by the government of Israel . Water Print of some Israeli agricultural exports to Europe: 1 Avocado = 154 gallons of water 1 Mango = 118 gallons of water 1 Date = 8 Gallons of water

  14. Mekorot: Israel´s national water carrier • Palestinians in the West Bank have to buy over half of their water from Mekorot (extracted from the West Bank!) at insufficient quantities • Israeli settlements supplied by wide high pressure pipelines and Palestinian communities much smaller diameter pipes • Discriminatory pricing policy (settlers subsidised on water for agriculture) • Mekorot now with business contracts in US, Brazil, Argentina, India, Portugal and expanding on basis of its experience in the West Bank

  15. Sanitation • 69 % of West Bank Palestinians not connected to mains sewerage and dependent on cess pits and septic tanks, often emptied directly into surrounding environment—a direct result of inability to develop adequate sewage and wastewater treatment and management. • 40% of the sewage produced in the West Bank originates from the settlements. Each year, settlements dump approximately 35 MCM of sewage in the environment, damaging Palestinian fields and water resources.

  16. Downstream from Ariel settlement wastewater pipe

  17. The Gaza Strip

  18. Overview of water and sanitation situation in Gaza • Coastal Aquifer, Gaza’s sole source of fresh water, unsuitable for human consumption • UN estimates aquifer unusable by 2016 leaving 1.7 million Palestinians with no alternatives • Dependence on desalinated brackish water for drinking. However, this is expensive. • 60% of households connected to sewage network. However, sewage treatment plants stretched beyond capacity; 85-90 million litres of sewage are dumped in the sea every day.

  19. Outflow pipe for Khan Younis Wastewater Treatment Plant

  20. Effect of the blockade on water and sanitation in Gaza • Israel prevents entry of essential materials necessary for construction and rehabilitation of water and sanitation infrastructure (94% of items cleared to enter in principle according to July 20, 2010 guidelines) • Restricted fuel and electricity necessary to operate water and wastewater services • At times has delayed entry of essential water purification chemicals such as chlorine.

  21. Operation ‘Pillars of Defense’:14 November – 21 November 2012 Israel targeted water distribution truck killing driver and his 8-year old son

  22. Damage to water and wastewater infrastructure • Coastal Municipality Water Utility: Damage to major water infrastructure during Cast Lead estimated at $US 6 million • UN Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict (Goldstone Report): “there was a deliberate and systematic policy on the part of the Israeli armed forces to target ... water installations.” From 2005 to 2010, Israel destroyed at least 305 wells located in the buffer zone – the Israeli-declared closed border area with Gaza, which contains the vast majority of land for agricultural production in Gaza - with a total cost of replacement of $9 million.

  23. What can you do? • Join the Thirsting for Justice Campaign World Water Day 2013 (March 22): organize a teach-in on water justice for Palestinians. Register at info@thirstingforjustice.org

More Related