From the Algemeiner by Benjamin Kerstein
For The Full Article go to - https://tinyurl.com/ybea3fjl
After an unusually
wet winter, Israel’s northern lake Kinneret (Sea of Galilee) is set to be full
for the first time in decades, Israeli news website N12 reported on Sunday.
After a weekend of heavy rains, the Kinneret
rose by six centimeters, bringing the water level to 209 meters, only 21
centimeters from the “red line” that marks its full capacity.
Two-thirds of Israeli territory is desert, and
the country usually contends with a lack rather than a surplus of water, but
the last two years have brought higher than average rainfall following several
years of drought.
The Kinneret once served as Israel’s main
source of fresh water, but due to the fluctuation, the country has mostly
switched over to other water sources and desalination. Now, however, Israel’s
Water Authority is once again permitting the use of the lake as a water source.
Dr. Amir Givati,
director of flood modeling at the company ClimaCell, told N12, “In just two years, the Kinneret has risen by more
than 5.5 meters. The Kinneret will continue to rise in the coming days and
already by the beginning of May the level is expected to stabilize for the
first time since February 1992 at the top of the red line, which means a full
Kinneret.”
In order to prevent flooding, the authorities
will likely use the Degania Dam to release excess water into the Jordan River
should the Kinneret continue to rise. Built in 1931, the dam has only been
opened twice in Israel’s history – in 1969 and 1992, the last time the Kinneret
was full.
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