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The world’s largest and cheapest reverse-osmosis desalination plant is up and running in Israel.
MIT Technology Review ^ | February 18, 2015 | David Talbot

Posted on 05/10/2015 4:29:37 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

n a Mediterranean beach 10 miles south of Tel Aviv, Israel, a vast new industrial facility hums around the clock. It is the world’s largest modern seawater desalination plant, providing 20 percent of the water consumed by the country’s households. Built for the Israeli government by Israel Desalination Enterprises, or IDE Technologies, at a cost of around $500 million, it uses a conventional desalination technology called reverse osmosis (RO). Thanks to a series of engineering and materials advances, however, it produces clean water from the sea cheaply and at a scale never before achieved.

Worldwide, some 700 million people don’t have access to enough clean water. In 10 years the number is expected to explode to 1.8 billion. In many places, squeezing fresh water from the ocean might be the only viable way to increase the supply.

The new plant in Israel, called Sorek, was finished in late 2013 but is just now ramping up to its full capacity; it will produce 627,000 cubic meters of water daily, providing evidence that such large desalination facilities are practical. Indeed, desalinated seawater is now a mainstay of the Israeli water supply. Whereas in 2004 the country relied entirely on groundwater and rain, it now has four seawater desalination plants running; Sorek is the largest. Those plants account for 40 percent of Israel’s water supply. By 2016, when additional plants will be running, some 50 percent of the country’s water is expected to come from desalination.

The traditional criticism of reverse-osmosis technology is that it costs too much. The process uses a great deal of energy to force salt water against polymer membranes that have pores small enough to let fresh water through while holding salt ions back. However, Sorek will profitably sell water to the Israeli water authority for 58 U.S. cents per cubic meter (1,000 liters, or about what one person in Israel uses per week), which is a lower price than today’s conventional desalination plants can manage. What’s more, its energy consumption is among the lowest in the world for large-scale desalination plants.

The Sorek plant incorporates a number of engineering improvements that make it more efficient than previous RO facilities. It is the first large desalination plant to use pressure tubes that are 16 inches in diameter rather than eight inches. The payoff is that it needs only a fourth as much piping and other hardware, slashing costs. The plant also has highly efficient pumps and energy recovery devices. “This is indeed the cheapest water from seawater desalination produced in the world,” says Raphael Semiat, a chemical engineer and desalination expert at the Israel Institute of Technology, or Technion, in Haifa. “We don’t have to fight over water, like we did in the past.” Australia, Singapore, and several countries in the Persian Gulf are already heavy users of seawater desalination, and California is also starting to embrace the technology (see “Desalination Out of Desperation”). Smaller-scale RO technologies that are energy-efficient and relatively cheap could also be deployed widely in regions with particularly acute water problems—even far from the sea, where brackish underground water could be tapped.

Earlier in development are advanced membranes made of atom-thick sheets of carbon, which hold the promise of further cutting the energy needs of desalination plants.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Government; Science
KEYWORDS: desalination; desalinization; drought; energy; hydroponics; israel; reverseosmosis; trickleirrigation; water
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1 posted on 05/10/2015 4:29:37 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Governor Moonbeam,

This Requires Your Attention NOW!!

SIncerely

M.M.


2 posted on 05/10/2015 4:31:24 PM PDT by MeshugeMikey ("Never, Never, Never, Give Up," Winston Churchill ><>)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Great idea


3 posted on 05/10/2015 4:34:08 PM PDT by wastedyears (I may be stupid, but at least I'm not Darwin Awards stupid.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

But are they building high-speed rail??


4 posted on 05/10/2015 4:35:45 PM PDT by beethovenfan (Islam is a cancer on civilization.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Sorek,after Dr Spock’s father....


5 posted on 05/10/2015 4:35:47 PM PDT by sheik yerbouty ( Make America and the world a jihad free zone!)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“In your seed all the nations of the earth shall be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice” (Gen. 22:18).


6 posted on 05/10/2015 4:36:06 PM PDT by Former Fetus (Saved by grace through faith)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Is the salt concentration lower in the Med than in the oceans? Does desal work better there or would it be about the same?


7 posted on 05/10/2015 4:37:58 PM PDT by Bob (No, being a US Senator and the Secretary of State are not accomplishments; they're jobs.)
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To: beethovenfan

No, but if they did they’d probably make it work somehow and make a profit.


8 posted on 05/10/2015 4:38:53 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You can help: https://donate.tedcruz.org/c/FBTX0095/)
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To: Bob

Go read the comments.


9 posted on 05/10/2015 4:39:45 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You can help: https://donate.tedcruz.org/c/FBTX0095/)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

I still don´t understand why they don´t bring water from the Mediterrean Sea into the Dead Sea, I would think it would produce a lot of kilowatts of power as it flows into the Dead Sea, and it keeps evaporating, and could keep flowing. It would help with the rising sea levels. Maybe even pump some of the same water into Death Valley in California..


10 posted on 05/10/2015 4:41:33 PM PDT by rovenstinez
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Okay, so that is $0.002196 per gallon. I don’t understand where the common refrain comes from that desalinization plants are not cost effective. Was repayment of the $500 million factored into the Israeli price? Even if not, over the life of the plant, I doubt the cost is prohibitive.


11 posted on 05/10/2015 4:44:39 PM PDT by Reno89519 (For every illegal or H1B with a job, there's an American without one. Muslim = Nazi = Evil)
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To: MeshugeMikey

“Governor Moonbeam, This Requires Your Attention NOW!!”

They would have to double ir triple the price of their crops to pay the quoted price for this.


12 posted on 05/10/2015 4:50:43 PM PDT by TexasGator
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To: Reno89519

“Okay, so that is $0.002196 per gallon. I don’t understand where the common refrain comes from that desalinization plants are not cost effective.”

At the quoted price it would cost CA about $3,000 per acre to water their crops.


13 posted on 05/10/2015 4:54:13 PM PDT by TexasGator
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To: rovenstinez

As far as I know, the Red Sea-Dead Sea canal/pipeline project is a definitely moving ahead.

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/jordan-israel-agree-900m-red-sea-dead-sea-pipeline-1489773


14 posted on 05/10/2015 4:55:14 PM PDT by jjotto ("Ya could look it up!")
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To: Reno89519

Here is why it is prohibitive. Water is freedom. If people have clean water, they have an opportunity to create economies. Economies create wealth and innovation. Wealth and innovation create solutions to the worlds problems. Can’t have that in a utopian paradise.

Take all the money given to the UN each year and build desalination plants along the African coast and you eliminate global hunger and poverty. Unfortunately to the commies, that cannot happen. Building desalination plants removes any water from the ocean that would cause massive flooding as well as green large swaths of land which will eat CO2 and produce oxygen.


15 posted on 05/10/2015 4:56:55 PM PDT by EQAndyBuzz (two if by van, one if by broom)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

There is a freeper who shows up on these threads and always says that the leftover brine from desal plants is highly toxic — worse than radioactive waste. Putting it in the ocean, or the Dead Sea, or Death Valley would have devastating consequences.

I don’t know anything, so I can’t say he’s wrong. But I guess Israel thinks he is.


16 posted on 05/10/2015 5:04:36 PM PDT by ClearCase_guy ("It's not easy being drunk all the time; everyone would do it, if it were easy.")
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To: ClearCase_guy

They’re arguing about it in the comments at the article.


17 posted on 05/10/2015 5:06:13 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet (You can help: https://donate.tedcruz.org/c/FBTX0095/)
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To: MeshugeMikey
Governor Moonbeam, This Requires Your Attention NOW!!

Moonbeam doesn't have a brain. He is like the scarecrow in wizard of Oz. This ars is one step below King Obama and the King is a child like joker. Doesn't hold much hope for California and King Obama has already destroyed America and its allies.

18 posted on 05/10/2015 5:07:50 PM PDT by Logical me
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

There go them Jews again ...


19 posted on 05/10/2015 5:18:19 PM PDT by SkyDancer ( I Was Told Nobody Is Perfect But Yet, Here I Am ...)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Dumb Israelis. The money they wasted on that desalination plant could have been used instead to build a high-speed rail from somewhere to somewhere else.


20 posted on 05/10/2015 5:31:23 PM PDT by Leaning Right (Why am I holding this lantern? I am looking for the next Reagan.)
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