Author Archive
DAI in Cappadocia
Sunday, June 15th, 2008The village Ibrahimpasa in Cappadocia, in central Turkey, where we went to study the water issues of the region.
Talking with Willemijn Bouwman, who invited the DAI to contribute to her project: the Art Eco Platform.
Collection of trash in Ibrahimpasa
Walking in the amazing landscape: for thousands of years, people built their houses by cutting them into the soft rock.
In the Göreme Open Air Museum, where once was a bustling Monastery community, with numerous chapels, refectories, kitchens and living quarters cut into the rock.
In the underground city of Derinkuyu
The on-site classroom of the Organic Agriculture Program of the Cappadocia Vocational College in Mustafapasa with their teacher Ceren Nazik (on the right).
Walk with Mehmet Ali, the deputy mayor, along the water infrastructure of Ibrahimpasa
The former Orthodox church in Ibrahimpasa
Visiting the Wali (governor) of Nevsehir
for more see: www.nevsehir.gov.tr/haber_oku.php?id=720
At the garbage dump of Nevsehir
Examining the water of the natural hot spring in Bayramhaci
Turkey / Israel Deals
Monday, May 19th, 2008www.uswaternews.com/archives/arcglobal/4israsign3.html
Israel signs agreement to buy water from Turkey
March 2004
U.S. Water News Online
JERUSALEM — Israel has signed an agreement to buy water from Turkey and may pay for part of it with weapons, in a deal aimed at alleviating Israel’s chronic water shortage and cementing its relations with an important Middle East ally.
Under the 20-year agreement, Turkey will ship 40,500 acre feet of water annually from its Manavgat River, which flows into the Mediterranean Sea, the two countries said. Details must still be worked out, including the price of the water and how to transport it to Israel, they said.
The agreement, more than two years in the making, comes at a time when Israel’s main source of fresh water, the Sea of Galilee, is full to overflowing after abundant rainfall. But long-term prospects in the arid region are bleak.
Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Jonathan Peled said the water would probably be shipped in tankers or towed across the Mediterranean in large plastic bubbles to a storage facility.
Based on estimated shipping costs from the ministry, the deal could amount to tens of millions of dollars a year for Turkey. Peled said a small amount of that money would be paid in goods, most likely military items.
In the parched Middle East, water is a strategic issue as well as one of survival. Turkey is one of the few countries in the region with water reserves, and sales of the precious commodity could boost its position as a regional power.
Israel’s relationship with the large Islamic country is important to the Jewish state, especially after more than three years of fighting with the Palestinians. The violence has caused tension in the Middle East and strained Israel’s ties with Egypt and Jordan, the only Arab countries with which it has signed peace treaties.
“This agreement will increase the cooperation between the two countries and also lead to peace and stability in the Middle East,” said Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Namik Tan.
He said the landmark agreement turns water into an internationally accepted “commodity,” and that Turkey hopes to sell water to other countries.
Israel currently gets most of its water from the Sea of Galilee. It also is building a desalination plant in the port city of Ashkelon, a project that is expected to take several years to complete.
Peled said Israel hopes the deal with Turkey could lead to further agreements to share water with Jordan or the Palestinians.
Turkeys contribution to Expo 2008 in Zaragossa deals with water
Monday, May 19th, 2008At Expo 2008, Turkey to reflect humanitarian approach to waterwww.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=142181
water problems in far away Arctic Canada
Sunday, May 11th, 2008just back from Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, close to the arctic circle: they also have a lot of problems with water, wastewater and garbage there. Even though there was about 40 cm of snow when we arrived, the amount of annual precipitation is very small and the area is categorized as a desert: water is scarce. Part of the town and most of the smaller communities do not get water through a pipe system. Each house gets it delivered by truck every day into a tank. If there is a snow storm, the truck often cannot ride, and you have to ration your water, very quick showers, or none at all, if the storm lasts another day or two. In the same way, the waste water is collected by truck from the houses and is driven to the sewage lagoon at the end of town. Not such a problem in winter, when this lake of shit is frozen, but in the summer it stinks. And the animals, birds, and in some communities even the bigger animals, Caribou, that are hunted for food, started to feed from the sewage lagoons. Garbage is another big problem: everything that is brought there stays there and ends on the dump (machines, cars, building material, packaging, paper, plastic, beer cans, you name it). Due to the climate, the breakdown even of biological material takes much longer than elsewhere. And the dump grows and grows. They are thinking of solutions, but until now, they haven’t found any they could afford.