[Essay] The Dead Sea is drying out
(CNN)Something's happening at the lowest point on our planet, some 1,388 feet
below sea level.
The Dead Sea, a salt lake nestled by Israel, Jordan and the West Bank, is
shrinking at an alarming rate -- about 3.3 feet per year, according to the
environmentalist group EcoPeace Middle East. And human actions are largely to
blame.
"It's not just like one country is punishing the Dead Sea; it's more like the
whole region," said photographer Moritz Kustner, who visited the area in
February to work on his series "The Dying Dead Sea."
The Dead Sea needs water from the other natural sources surrounding it, such
as the Jordan River basin. But around the 1960s, some of the water sources it
relied upon were diverted. Israel, for instance, built a pipeline during that
time so it could supply water throughout the country.
Mineral extraction industries are another main reason the water levels are
declining, experts say. The Dead Sea's minerals have been hailed for their
therapeutic properties and can often be found in cosmetics and other consumer
products.
And then, of course, there's the Middle East's hot, dry climate, which makes
it difficult for the lake to replenish itself.
Last year, Israel and Jordan signed a $900 million deal in an effort to
stabilize the Dead Sea's water levels. It entails building a canal from the
Red Sea to the Dead Sea so that both countries would be able to not only
supply water to Israel and Jordan but also to pump much needed water -- some
300 million cubic meters annually -- into the Dead Sea.
"This is the most important and significant agreement since the peace treaty
with Jordan (in 1994)," said Silvan Shalom, Israel's energy and water
resources minister at the time. Whether the canal -- estimated to take three
years to complete -- will work out positively and as planned remains to be
seen.
But for now, Kustner shows us that the Dead Sea remains very much a place of
interest, with people from all over the world flocking there to swim in its
salty waters.
The Dead Sea, known as the Salt Sea in Hebrew, is one of the saltiest bodies
of water in the world, with around 34% salinity. And because of what has been
happening over the years, the salt is only getting saltier.
Earlier this month, nearly 30 marathon swimmers from around the world --
wanting to bring awareness to the falling water levels -- swam the nine-mile
Dead Sea stretch from Jordan to Israel. They wore face masks to protect their
eyes and mouths, but one swimmer still described the experience as being
"like acid burning your eyeballs."
"It's an unfriendly environment for people to live there or to stay there,"
Kustner said. "It's really salty and if you taste the Dead Sea, it's not
tasting like salty water anymore. It's just tasting toxic."
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