Last week marked World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought, a UN holiday promoting public awareness of efforts to stop land degradation. As desertification and water scarcity are intensifying as global concerns, especially in the Middle East, experts say new technologies including artificial intelligence have become increasingly viable tools to combat these crises.
“Water is not created nor destroyed,” said Scott Hansen, a senior lecturer at the Zuckerberg Institute for Water Research at Ben-Gurion University. “To deal with water scarcity, you can produce more drinkable water as well as reduce consumption.”
In the Middle East, the most water-stressed region in the world, Israel is a leader in the field, with more than 80% of Israel’s potable water produced through desalination.
Israel began developing desalination technology back in the 1960s and has also been a leader in fields such as irrigation technology and solar water heating. In 2011, the country achieved a new accomplishment in the field with the establishment of WINT Water Intelligence, a water management company that uses AI to stop water waste.
“Israel was always at the forefront of these things. And we’re just continuing that thread with water efficiency and helping the world solve water scarcity, especially in this region,” Yaron Dycian, chief product and strategy officer at WINT, said.
Dycian said that Israel is using its water technology for “the good of the world.” “This is a water-stressed area. …We are working with other parts of the region for something that’s for the good of everyone,” he said.
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WINT specifically focuses on reducing water waste after the water has passed the utility meter into a consumer’s home or business. “That’s where the vast majority of it goes, and that’s where things start to break,” Dycian said. “About a quarter of the water that gets into these buildings goes to waste.”
He explained that something as simple as a leaking toilet can waste dozens of gallons of water per hour, generating the same carbon emissions annually as a typical passenger car.
WINT installs water flow meters and valves throughout a building’s plumbing and connects them to a control unit that monitors the water flow. This AI-integrated system identifies leakage patterns, sends alerts, and, when necessary, shuts off the water to prevent damage.
“We’ve identified cooling power issues that wastewater at a rate of hundreds of thousands of dollars a year,” Dycian said. The Empire State Building and Israel’s Azrieli mall chain are among WINT’s customers.
Dycian believes this technology will become standard in new buildings. “Installing a solution like ours into a building is not complicated. It’s a few valves and meters,” he said. “And with that, you have a waterproof, water-safe, water-efficient building.”
Kando, another Israeli company founded in 2011, uses technology to monitor wastewater. Using advanced hardware, artificial intelligence, and machine learning, the company collects and analyzes wastewater data.
About 85% of Israel’s wastewater is used for irrigation. “Wastewater quality determines almost everything that happens in the treatment process,” Anne-Li Steutel, marketing manager at Kando, said. “If you have a very low quality of wastewater that flows into the treatment plants, it will harm them.”
When wastewater is discharged with a higher risk of pollution, the system will take an automated sample and trace its source, Steutel said. In one case, an Israeli city started receiving complaints from farmers that their crops were dying. Wastewater tests showed high salinity, a condition not typically treated at the plant.
Conventional wastewater monitoring is done periodically. Compared to Kando’s constant testing, period sampling is less reliable. “You don’t have six months to figure out where this is coming from because if you’re using it for water reuse and it’s killing plants, it’s quite urgent,” she said, emphasizing the need to find the source quickly.