
From Sewage to Energy: The Restoration of the Kidron Valley Brings Life Back to the Desert.
About eight years ago, a capstone project I supervised at the Faculty of Management at Ben-Gurion University won first prize in the university’s “Green Campus” competition.
The project, titled “Ecological Wastewater Treatment – How to Turn Sewage from a Nuisance into a Resource,” explored the environmental, engineering and economic aspects of transforming wastewater into a source of energy, sustainability and regional development.
At the time, some of the ideas appeared ambitious and naturally raised questions regarding their engineering and economic feasibility.
This week, during a visit to the Kidron Valley area in the Judean Desert, I had the opportunity to see how some of these concepts are now being implemented in practice as part of the “Restoration of the Kidron Stream” project.
One of the most fascinating components of the project is located at the Og Wastewater Treatment Plant in the northern Judean Desert, where a unique hydroelectric turbine has been installed to generate electricity from the wastewater flow descending from the Jerusalem area toward Jericho and the Dead Sea.
The system utilizes the dramatic elevation differences between the Jerusalem hills and the Jordan Valley, allowing the facility to operate with energy independence and without consuming electricity from Israel’s national power grid.
During a recent professional tour conducted by Israel’s Water Authority management, project teams presented the progress achieved so far, the engineering challenges involved, and the new hydroelectric systems designed to generate energy from wastewater flow.
The tour reviewed the restoration work along the Kidron Stream, where sewage is intercepted through dedicated collection systems and transferred via sewage collectors to treatment facilities in the Horkania Valley area.
Project planners described several complex engineering challenges, including:
Constructing interception facilities,
Transporting wastewater through changing desert topography,
and excavating a tunnel beneath the cliffs of the ancient Mar Saba Monastery.
The project combines advanced environmental engineering, ecological restoration, heritage preservation and regional cooperation.
Despite the political complexities of recent years, the Kidron restoration project is also being carried out in cooperation with the Palestinian Authority — demonstrating how issues related to water, environment and infrastructure can sometimes connect different sides even during difficult periods.
Today, for the first time in decades, large sections of the Kidron streambed are free of sewage pollution.
Beyond its environmental importance, the project demonstrates how water infrastructure, renewable energy and long-term strategic thinking can transform an ongoing environmental hazard into a driver of sustainability and regional development.
The restoration of the Kidron Valley is far more than an infrastructure project.
It serves as a reminder that even in a complex region such as the Middle East, water, energy and environmental restoration can become a bridge between past, present and future.
“And the waters shall be healed.” (Ezekiel 47).
