The IDF announced the implementation of its new plan, "IDF Protects the Environment", to the sum of one billion NIS, in which it will mend past damages and prevent future harm to Israel's natural landscapes.
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Do You Know What Desertification Is?

Some 97 percent of land in Israel is classified as dry land. The driest area is in the south, the Arava desert, near Eilat.
Israel was one of the first countries to begin addressing desertification crisis.
Despite major conventions on desertification signed at Rio de Janeiro in the 1990s, many Western countries persist in relating to the issue as a low priority. This perception started to change four years ago, when the UN and the World Bank re-emphasized that desertification, a problem that affects more than 200 million people, is a major cause of global poverty and hunger.

Forests thrive in places where trees never took root before and salt- and drought-resistant plants flourish, innovated by Israeli scientists. Commercial fishponds dot the desert, and algae grow abundantly for use in pharmaceuticals and health foods.
Water management is a crucial part of controlling desertification. About half the water used for agriculture cycles through 240 reservoirs built by Keren Kayemeth L'Yisrael-Jewish National Fund, a key player in desertification efforts and education. Israel reuses about 74 percent of its wastewater; Spain, the second most efficient country in wastewater recycling, reuses only 20 percent.
Source: Israel21c
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