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As every day brings urgent reports of growing water shortages around the world, there is no time to lose in the search for solutions.
The U.S. government predicts that forty of our fifty states—and 60 percent of the earth's land surface—will soon face alarming gaps between available water and the growing demand for it. Without action, food prices will rise, economic growth will slow, and political instability is likely to follow.
Let There Be Water illustrates how Israel can serve as a model for the United States and countries everywhere by showing how to blunt the worst of the coming water calamities. Even with 60 percent of its country made of desert, Israel has not only solved its water problem; it also had an abundance of water. Israel even supplies water to its neighbors—the Palestinians and the Kingdom of Jordan—every day.
Based on meticulous research and hundreds of interviews, Let There Be Water reveals the methods and techniques of the often offbeat inventors who enabled Israel to lead the world in cutting-edge water technology.
Let There Be Water also tells unknown stories of how cooperation on water systems can forge diplomatic ties and promote unity. Remarkably, not long ago, now-hostile Iran relied on Israel to manage its water systems, and access to Israel's water know-how helped to warm China's frosty relations with Israel.
Beautifully written, Let There Be Water is an inspiring account of the vision and sacrifice by a nation and people that have long made water security a top priority. Despite scant natural water resources, a rapidly growing population and economy, and often hostile neighbors, Israel has consistently jumped ahead of the water innovation-curve to assure a dynamic, vital future for itself. Every town, every country, and every reader can benefit from learning what Israel did to overcome daunting challenges and transform itself from a parched land into a water superpower.
352 pages, Hardcover
First published October 6, 2015
, sharing both hard-won knowledge and excess as a diplomatic wedge to other parched places (including Iran, Jordan, China, and California, among many developing nations south of the equator via continuous NGO outreach). It's a triumph of human achievement that comes as quite a comfort in the face of climate change at the end of these 2010s, with the asterisked caveat that Israel's water security has backslid significantly over the past 5 years since this book's publication. I am told that the present five-year-long drought is partly due to decreased rainfall but also partly to the success of the author in quenching existentialist concerns. Since the late 1950s, Israel has been seeding clouds with silver iodide in the winter months to enhance the amount of rainfall. By the 1960s, Israel had put a lot of resources into testing rain-cloud seeding and developed world-renowned expertise in how and when to seed. It is believed that cloud seeding may add as much as eighteen percent to the rainfall over the Sea of Galilee watershed and about ten percent to what falls on the lake itself. The technique may be adding as much as ten billion gallons of water a year to the lake. At a cost of only about $1.5 million for the annual Mekorot cloud-seeding operation, this is very inexpensive water.No, I'm not excerpting. That's it. That's all Siegel has to say about cloud-seeding in his entire book. There's no discussion of the technology's inventors, its precursors, the underlying theory or science that supports it, any trials and errors, false-starts, dependencies, or other possible avenues for drama. Nor does Siegel consider to address whether or how Israel has managed the wellspring of possible legal, religious, or philosophical objections or constraints to seeding including riparian rights, pollutant effects, and any consequences for dry, downwind neighbors. What's true for the (lack of) seeding detail applies to most of the rest of his aqua tale. Oh, sure, there's a cute bit around page 62 about how anticorporate, socialist kibbutzim shared as opposed to capitalized on Simcha Blass's drip irrigation patent, but by and large, the author presents a myriad of aquatechnologies without consideration of any conflict.