Skip to main content

Envisioning is an emerging technology research institute and advisory.

LinkedInInstagramGitHub

2011 — 2026

research
  • Reports
  • Newsletter
  • Methodology
  • Origins
  • My Collection
services
  • Research Sessions
  • Signals Workspace
  • Bespoke Projects
  • Use Cases
  • Signal Scanfree
  • Readinessfree
impact
  • ANBIMAFuture of Brazilian Capital Markets
  • IEEECharting the Energy Transition
  • Horizon 2045Future of Human and Planetary Security
  • WKOTechnology Scanning for Austria
audiences
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • Consultants
  • Foresight
  • Associations
  • Governments
resources
  • Pricing
  • Partners
  • How We Work
  • Data Visualization
  • Multi-Model Method
  • FAQ
  • Security & Privacy
about
  • Manifesto
  • Community
  • Events
  • Support
  • Contact
  • Login
ResearchServicesPricingPartnersAbout
ResearchServicesPricingPartnersAbout
  1. Home
  2. Research
  3. Grid
  4. Large-Scale Seawater Reverse Osmosis Desalination

Large-Scale Seawater Reverse Osmosis Desalination

Israel produces 80%+ of its drinking water from desalination, operating five mega-plants including Sorek — one of the world's largest and most efficient SWRO facilities.
Back to GridView interactive version

Israel has built the world's most advanced large-scale seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) desalination infrastructure, with five major coastal plants (Ashkelon, Palmachim, Hadera, Sorek, Ashdod) collectively producing over 585 million cubic meters of potable water annually — more than 80% of domestic drinking water. The Sorek plant, using advanced 16-inch RO membrane technology and energy recovery devices, achieves among the lowest desalination costs globally at approximately $0.50/m³. A sixth plant (Sorek-2) and a northern facility are under construction.

Israel's desalination program is the most successful national-scale deployment of the technology in history, transforming a water-stressed nation into one with surplus supply. The achievement is particularly remarkable because it was driven by existential necessity — Israel's natural freshwater sources could not sustain a growing population in a region where water access is geopolitically contested. IDE Technologies and other Israeli firms developed innovations in membrane cleaning, energy recovery, and intake/outfall systems that set global benchmarks.

Strategically, Israeli desalination expertise is a major export and soft-power tool. IDE has built plants in the U.S., China, India, and Australia. As climate change intensifies water scarcity worldwide — affecting 2+ billion people — Israeli desalination technology and operational know-how represent a critical capability for global adaptation. The technology also feeds Israel's agricultural water recycling system, creating a circular water economy that is studied worldwide.

TRL
9/9Established
Impact
5/5
Investment
4/5
Category
Applications

Book a research session

Bring this signal into a focused decision sprint with analyst-led framing and synthesis.
Research Sessions