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As part of the National Dead Sea development plan, the Israel Nature and Parks Authority (INPA) is leading a project for the elimination of invasive species. The goal of the project is to restore and protect the biodiversity of the region by attempting to eliminate invasive plant species that have overtaken native flora. ICL Dead Sea Works (DSW) is taking an active role in the program and has launched, in collaboration with the INPA, a multi-stage project to eliminate invasive vegetation species at the site and to contribute to biodiversity preservation.
What is an invasive species?
As part of the National Dead Sea development plan, the INPA is leading a project for the elimination of invasive species. The goal of the project is to restore and protect the biodiversity of the region by attempting to eliminate invasive plant species that have overtaken native flora. DSW is taking an active role in the program and has launched, in collaboration with the INPA, a multi-stage project to eliminate invasive vegetation species at the site and contribute to biodiversity preservation.
Uprooting and rehabilitation
The ICL DSW environmental protection and infrastructure departments have initiated a project to eliminate invasive vegetation that spreads uncontrollably in nature reserves, among other places, and disrupts the ecological balance. As Sdom is a relatively isolated region, the fight against invasive vegetation in this region is not lost. Therefore, ICL Dead Sea, with the assistance and guidance of the INPA, has committed to uprooting invasive plant species (mostly Washingtonia fan palms and mesquite), found on the facility’s grounds and along Route 90. In addition, looking forward, ICL Dead Sea will avoid planting any known invasive plant species when landscaping the gardens of its Sdom facilities.
As part of the plan, invasive trees have been uprooted. In their place, native species have been introduced in appropriate areas. This year, during the Israeli holiday of Tu BiShvat, native trees, such as the Sdom Apple (calotropis procera), were planted on the facility’s grounds.
Artificial light enables us to work around the clock, but it also creates biodiversity challenges due to artificially illuminating the surroundings. The effect of artificial illumination on the natural environment is known as “light pollution”. Illuminating areas close to production sites at night is adverse to the ecological balance, could disturb animals and disrupt biological processes that occur only in the dark. Reducing light pollution could be a simple matter, such as eliminating or switching off unnecessary illumination, reducing the intensity of lighting installations, restricting its hours of use, or selecting different types of illumination such as focused torches and not those having ball symmetry.
ICL Dead Sea’s production sites are located in a sensitive region, from a panoramic and ecological perspective, and therefore it is important to reduce, as much as possible, its effect on the environment and ecosystems. In recent years, ICL Dead Sea has been addressing the challenge of reducing light pollution in several ways:
The southern portion of the ICL Dead Sea (DSW) site encompasses 36,000 hectares in the Judean Desert near the Dead Sea. This area contains distinctive panoramic, geological and historical attributes, some of which have been impacted by ICL Dead Sea’s quarrying, mining and drilling activities, as well as other factors unrelated to the Company. ICL Dead Sea has initiated and is engaged in various rehabilitation and restoration projects within its concession area. The Company continues its efforts to minimize its environmental footprint.
ICL is also working on restoration projects with partners such as the Tamar Regional Council, The Israeli Ministry of Environmental Protection and the Nature and Parks Authority. Projects include a restoration plan at Heimar stream estuary, providing organized safe access to public open areas, conservation of the “Sdom Saltmarsh Lake” and making it accessible to the general public, as well as other initiatives.
The scenic view of the Dead Sea is unique in Israel and the world. One of the areas that were neglected with historic environmental hazards was located on the edge of ICL DS’s pond 35, Tamarit Site. Historically, municipal wastewater ponds were located there as was a pirate landfill containing construction waste. For travelers on Road 90, the line of sight towards the ponds was blocked by piles of waste and debris. ICL DS offered to engage in a panoramic restoration by using excess salt, dug up from pond 35 and regular maintenance. Landscape architect, Nimrod Amado, planned the landscape for observation posts made of salt overlooking the amazing view of pond 5 (the Dead Sea hotels complex is located on its shores). At the top of each salt hill a pergola will be set up which will include explanatory signs about the region. The site was developed by ICL in cooperation with the Tamar municipal council and is expected to open to the public during 2022.
Water flowing in the Bokek stream has turned salty in the past decades. Due to the ecological importance of the area, ICL Dead Sea, in cooperation with Israel’s Nature and Parks Authority, pays for fresh water to flow through the stream and for the catchment of the salt water and its transfer out of the stream.
Restoration of Areas Disturbed by ICL Dead Sea’s Activity in the Concession Area
Over the past several decades, ICL Dead Sea has carried out various earthworks in open areas that are a part of the Company’s concession area in order to support its production facilities. These works resulted in various environmental disruptions and hazards which ICL Dead Sea, over recent years, has resolved to address by restoring these areas, in collaboration with the Ministry of Environmental Protection and the Israel Nature and Parks Authority. At later stages, ICL Dead Sea plans to continue upgrading some of the sites to make them accessible to the public.
Size (hectare) | Protected | Status | |
---|---|---|---|
2019: Navit Pond & Sdom mountain | 28.5 | Inside a nature reserve | Fully restored - third party approved |
2019: Ashalim Stream- east road 90 | 6.5 | Adjacent to a nature reserve | Fully restored - third party approved |
By Geoteva
The Arava stream canyon constitutes a sort of natural border between Israel and the Kingdom of Jordan. It begins south of the ICL Dead Sea’s most southern evaporation pond, through a course between the Jordanian evaporation ponds to the east and ICL Dead Sea’s ponds to the west, and from there continues north towards its end in the northern basin of the Dead Sea.
The Arava stream canyon meanders in a buffer area between the Israeli and Jordanian facilities, and their brine water is discharged there, following mineral extraction.
The discharge of brines to the stream by ICL DSW is transparently and continuously reported to the authorities, and conducted according to publicly available permits. It should be noted that due to this flow of brine back to the Dead Sea, ICL DS needs to pump more from the Dead Sea. In addition, and separately from the Arava stream, there is another adjacent brine flow channel, where seeping brines from ICL DSW’s Pond 5 are collected. The brine flow channel is well known and the authorities are familiar with it. Many observation visits of this area have been conducted, including by helicopter, as entry to this hazardous area (due to old land mines) is prohibited.
In the late 1970s, the northern basin, which is natural and deep, and the southern basin, which is shallow and contains ICL DSW’s evaporation pond array, became severed. The buffer area between the northern and southern basins has transformed into a dried-up seabed, a hazardous area due to the prevalence of sinkholes and landmines strewn throughout it. As a result of the decreasing water level in the northern basin and growing height differences, the Arava stream and the adjacent Brine flow channel have both eroded. The erosion has gotten much stronger due to the decreasing level of the Dead Sea uncovering geological phenomena that the authorities would like to preserve.
ICL DSW, in coordination with The Council for Conservation of Heritage Sites in Israel, will convert an old worker camp of the Eretz-Israeli Potash Company into a new visitor center. The visitor center will include exhibits with three main themes:
Close to ILS 50 million has been invested in the project, which is expected to be open to the public in the near future.
Heimar stream, one of the longest creeks in the Judean desert, contains unique geography and biodiversity, including rare plants, animals and geological formations. In the midst of this environment, extensive mining and water infrastructure works (damming and flow channels) have been conducted over many years, including drilling and pumping stations for ICL Dead Sea Works. The Company, in cooperation with the INPA and the Tamar Regional Council, formed a plan for the integrated restoration of the area. The plan includes panoramic and ecological restoration of damaged areas, as well as restoration of areas for tourism development in the areas adjacent to the road. ICL has selected a plan involving minimum development – that will provide hikers with an opportunity to explore the area without damaging it. This plan will allow for mining activity to continue in parallel with restoration of the entire area. The detailed plan was approved in 2017.
In 2020, a steering committee for the restoration of Nahal Himar (downstream) was formed. The participants in the committee include ICL DS, the Nature and Parks Authority’s East Negev environmental unit and others. The committee will advance different restoration plans for the Nahal Heimar area.