Israel plans to replenish the Lower Jordan, which flows from the Sea of Galilee north to the Dead Sea, with 30 million cubic meters annually, when the rehabilitation project gets into full swing in two years. During the initial stage launched on Sunday approximately 1,000 cubic meters of water are being discharged per hour.At the same time the organizations involved will clean the riverbed and treat water to remove pollution and reduce salinity of the river. Earlier Israeli military conducted an effort to sweep for land mines along the river left there decades ago after the Six-Day War in 1967. The Lower Jordan serves as the border between the nation of Jordan in the east and Israel and the Israeli-occupied West Bank in the west.The plan is to restore the natural environment of the Lower Jordan River and make it attractive to tourists. One site has particular significance for Christians, because John the Baptist is thought to have baptized Jesus there. Pilgrims flock to the nearby town of Jericho in the West Bank every year to visit the revered site.Lower Jordan was damaged greatly by decades of excessive water diversion upstream. Israel relied heavily on water taken from the Sea of Galilee to provide for its agricultural and drinking needs. Water flow from the lake into Jordan was cut after the establishment of the Deganya Dam in 1964, as the Jewish states sought to provide for the arriving immigrants.But Israel’s move to divert water via its National Water Carrier project irritated the country’s neighbors. The Headwater Diversion Plan by Lebanon was launched in 1964 by Syria and Jordan, which wanted to undermine Israel’s effort by curbing water supply to the Upper Jordan River and the Sea of Galilee it feeds.Israel responded with military attacks culminating with in airstrikes on Syria in April 1967. The water dispute and the hostilities over the diversion of the precious resource were a major factor behind the 1967 War, which started two months after the raid.The renewal of water release comes after improvements in technology and water conservation, Alexander Kushnir, Israeli Water Authority Commissioner, said.“We have established a system of desalination plants, water purification and waste water reuse facilities, along with optimizing the use and conservation of citizens – which has enabled the Water Authority to significantly increase the amount of water allocated to nature, along with the ever-increasing restoration of natural water resources,” he explained as cited by the Jerusalem Post.Combined with increased rainfalls after years of draught, those allowed the Sea of Galilee to raise to 209.96 meters below sea level, which is close to the maximum capacity of 208.8 meters below sea level, the body reports.The move was also hailed by the Jordanian contributors to the rehabilitation effort. But environmental activists, who generally favor the effort to help the Jordan River, criticized Israeli authorities over the small scale and the lack of transparency of the project.The target of 30 million cubic meters per year is “not anywhere near the 220 million cubic meters that we have identified is necessary – our concern relates to the process,” said Gidon Bromberg, Israeli director of Friends of the Earth Middle East. He added that the Water Authority had never done an independent assessment of the plan.“We cannot accept the process that is currently moving forward because it is moving forward in a non-transparent manner that prevents public debate, which is actually needed for the ecological rehabilitation of the Lower Jordan,” he said. … Read More
Get rid of it or leave: Russian Parliament approves ban on foreign assets for MPs, top officials
The bill covers all officials that assume state positions including Russian prime minister, deputy prime ministers and ministers, to the state servants like the Prosecutor General and his deputies, the Central Bank board, top regional officials and key executives of state-owned corporations, funds and other organizations that have their managers appointed by the president, the government or the prosecutor general.According to the Federation Council’s speaker Valentina Matvienko about ten Russian senators have accounts abroad.“But some may choose business rather than work in the Federation Council. According to the information I have, there are two or three such people,” Matvienko said Saturday after the Council unanimously supported the bill.The speaker refused to list those names, just added that “those are quite rich people.”After being amended and submitted by Russia’s lower house of parliament, the State Duma, in its second reading last week, the bill now extends the ban to all foreign securities, including travel checks. The restrictions spread not only for finance, but any valuables, including precious metals with foreign banks. The Duma draft also bans all foreign assets, including real estate and bonds issued by foreign governments. At the same time, the bill will allow state officials to have property abroad. However, they will have to declare it and report on how they obtained it lawfully as well as explain the sources of the income used to buy that property.The bill comes as a part of an anti-corruption crusade. It was put forward by President Vladimir Putin who submitted the bill to the lower house of Parliament in mid-February. Earlier in December, during his annual address to the Federal Assembly, Putin urged members of parliament to support the ban.After it’s signed into law by the President, civil servants will be given three months to get rid of their foreign savings and stocks. Those who fail to do so will lose their jobs. … Read More
Oligarch shuffle: Russian billionaire may pick up rival’s debt
Already a Rusal shareholder, Onexim holds 17% of the company and is closely ‘monitoring the opportunity’ to buy debt, Onexim CEO Dmitry Razumov told Bloomberg. If Oxemim isn’t able to buy debt, they will consider selling out. Onexim sold their 37.78% share in Polyus, Russia’s largest gold producer, for $3.6 billion in February. Since the sale, they have been closely eying new investment opportunities, and the latest may be buying debt in Rusal, a company famous for oligarch tiffs and turbulent relations.Prokhorov and fellow billionaire and stakeholder Viktor Vekselberg have clashed with Rusal CEO Oleg Deripaska over his decision keep a 25% share in Norlisk Nickel, a company whose value has dropped with falling precious metal prices and increased production costs. Last year Norlisk’s debt reached $10.8 billion.“We, as a minority shareholder, have limited influence over the management and the main owner’s decisions,” Razumov told Bloomberg in an interview.As precious metals fall, Prokhorov’s company has had to evolve its strategy to adapt to the changing markets.“We decided that our investment portfolio should be lighter, liquid and more flexible,” Ramzumov said.“We want assets that we can sell quickly to invest funds in other opportunities.” Pleasing shareholders is also at the top of Onexim’s priorities, so if the Rusal debt purchase fails, they may consider selling the stake altogether.If such a deal is brokered, it “will only allow Rusal to service its debt, but not to reduce it,” Razumov said, adding he wasn’t 100% certain the arrangement would go forward.The future of OneximOnexim, a private investment fund with over $25 billion in assets, has a wide breadth of investment holdings, both in Russia and worldwide.On April 3, Prokhorov’s company bought out the Russian division of Renaissance Capital, making it the sole owner of RenCap, according Onexim’s website. Onexim is also hoping to develop its commodity holdings with investment in Intergeo, a Siberian copper and nickel mining company.“It’s one of our priorities,” Razumov said, adding the public offering won’t happen until at least May, as the company waits for market conditions to improve.Onexim placed the proceeds from selling Polyus in Russian state banks, among the safest options currently, Razumov said. Only state banks are able to offer “the proper yield-risk ratio,” he said.Oligarch showdownThe feud began long ago when Prokhorov and Vekselberg were at odds with Deripaska over their Norilsk investment portfolio holdings. When Onexim traded 25% of their Norilsk shares for Rusal shares in 2008 for $5 billion, it instigated conflict between the shareholders at Norilsk.Vekselberg quit on March 12 as chairman of Rusal, citing the company’s deep crisis brought on by rival oligarch Oleg Deripaska. Other members accused Vekselberg of ‘jumping ship’ because for one year prior to his resignation, he had disengaged from company activities- he didn’t even attend board meetings.Vekselberg is listed by Forbes magazine as Russia’s eighth richest man with $12.4 billion fortune.Barry Cheung of the Hong Kong Mercantile Exchange was nominated and approved by the board 4 days after he quit.”I regret to say at this time that Rusal is in a deep crisis caused by the actions of the management,” Vekselberg said when he resigned, Reuters reports.Mikhail Prokorov is Russia’s tenth richest businessman, and the world’s sixty-ninth, according to Forbes billionaire index. Prokhorov ran against Vladimir Putin in last year’s presidential race, founding his own political party and receiving 8% of the vote. Prokhorov has a $13 billion fortune, most of which he made in in mining, metals, and energy, and later switched over to technology pre-crisis. Prokhorov bought an 80% share in the New York Nets basketball team, for $200 million in 2010. … Read More
10 Signs The Takedown Of Paper Gold Has Unleashed An Unprecedented Global Run On Physical Gold And Silver
The crash of the price of paper gold on Monday has unleashed an unprecedented global frenzy to buy physical gold and silver. … Read More








