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+====Water shortages happening in the Middle East now and will escalate to global armed conflict.==== |
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+**Rousseau 15** (4/12/2015, Associate Professor at the American University of Ras Al Khaimah, United Arab Emirates (Richard, "The Growing Potential for Water Wars", http://www.internationalpolicydigest.org/2015/04/12/the-growing-potential-for-water-wars/) |
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+Tensions over water are nothing new and will increase as shortages mount. However, |
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+AND |
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+and other scarce resources will ignite wars of global proportions in the future. |
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+====Desalinization plants are key to solve water shortages.==== |
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+**Jacobsen 16** (Rowan Jacobsen, Author specializing in food, sustainability and natural systems, "HOW A NEW SOURCE OF WATER IS HELPING REDUCE CONFLICT IN THE MIDDLE EAST", July 19, 2016, http://ensia.com/features/how-a-new-source-of-water-is-helping-reduce-conflict-in-the-middle-east/) |
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+We are standing above the new Sorek desalination plant, the largest reverse-osmosis |
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+AND |
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+Israel, the West Bank and Gaza for a meeting of the minds. |
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+====Only nuclear power is capable of sustaining desalinization projects==== |
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+**IAEA 15 **~~— widely known as the world's "Atoms for Peace" organization within the United Nations family. Set up in 1957 as the world's centre for cooperation in the nuclear field, the Agency works with its Member States and multiple partners worldwide to promote the safe, secure and peaceful use of nuclear technologies, "New Technologies for Seawater Desalination Using Nuclear Energy," IEAE TecDoc Series, 2015~~ |
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+ It is anticipated that by 2025, 33 of the world population, |
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+AND |
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+nuclear reactors and desalination systems for specific sites in the Mediterranean region |
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+dw |