This system of taking wastewater out of the city in order to reuse the water for agriculture seems like a good system, especially if the water can be treated to a decent level and can be effectively transported from the city to the agricultural land. It is also important that these places outside the city receive water for agriculture in exchange for the fresh water that they can provide.
I wanted to share a bit about the unique water system in the place where I live, the Arava region in Southern Israel. In the Arava there is a particular distinction made between the types of water that are used for different purposes. In houses and buildings, there are 2 faucets: one for pure drinking water, and one that is for washing dishes, cleaning, etc. The purer drinking water is less abundant and more expensive and energy intensive to produce because of its higher level of desalination required. For this reason, drinking water only flows from special faucets, and out of the other faucets and in the toilets and coming from the hoses and showers, is water that is desalinated to a lesser degree.
Agriculture in the region, despite the fact that it is an extreme desert with only an average rainfall of 30 milimeters per year, can be water intensive. However, most of the agriculture uses water that is processed to a lesser degree, and grey water can also be used in some places. Besides processing water to different salinities, extensive research is done on which crops and variations of crops can succeed in the region- particularly with less water, higher salinity water, and under extreme desert conditions. Dates and Peppers are among the main crops in the region.
The Arava region is also doing much research on solar energy, though several types of solar fields, and sustainable building structures (particularly those well suited for desert climates), in addition to an interesting water system in the very arid region. Some notable centers for environmental research in southern Israel are:
*The Arava Institute at Kibbutz Ketura https://www.arava.org/
*The center for creative ecology at Kibbutz Lotan https://www.kibbutzlotan.com/creativeEcology/ga/index.htm
*The Environmental field school, Midreshet Sde Boker https://www.boker.org.il/english/
There are also a number of sustainable communities in the region such as: Kibbutz Lotan, Kibbutz Ketura, Kibbutz Samar, Kibbutz Naot Smadar, Shacharut, and Zukim.
This system of taking wastewater out of the city in order to reuse the water for agriculture seems like a good system, especially if the water can be treated to a decent level and can be effectively transported from the city to the agricultural land. It is also important that these places outside the city receive water for agriculture in exchange for the fresh water that they can provide.
I wanted to share a bit about the unique water system in the place where I live, the Arava region in Southern Israel. In the Arava there is a particular distinction made between the types of water that are used for different purposes. In houses and buildings, there are 2 faucets: one for pure drinking water, and one that is for washing dishes, cleaning, etc. The purer drinking water is less abundant and more expensive and energy intensive to produce because of its higher level of desalination required. For this reason, drinking water only flows from special faucets, and out of the other faucets and in the toilets and coming from the hoses and showers, is water that is desalinated to a lesser degree.
Agriculture in the region, despite the fact that it is an extreme desert with only an average rainfall of 30 milimeters per year, can be water intensive. However, most of the agriculture uses water that is processed to a lesser degree, and grey water can also be used in some places. Besides processing water to different salinities, extensive research is done on which crops and variations of crops can succeed in the region- particularly with less water, higher salinity water, and under extreme desert conditions. Dates and Peppers are among the main crops in the region.
The Arava region is also doing much research on solar energy, though several types of solar fields, and sustainable building structures (particularly those well suited for desert climates), in addition to an interesting water system in the very arid region. Some notable centers for environmental research in southern Israel are:
*The Arava Institute at Kibbutz Ketura https://www.arava.org/
*The center for creative ecology at Kibbutz Lotan https://www.kibbutzlotan.com/creativeEcology/ga/index.htm
*The Environmental field school, Midreshet Sde Boker https://www.boker.org.il/english/
There are also a number of sustainable communities in the region such as: Kibbutz Lotan, Kibbutz Ketura, Kibbutz Samar, Kibbutz Naot Smadar, Shacharut, and Zukim.