'}}

Approval of Wind Energy Project Threatens All Aspects of Natives’ Lives in the Occupied Syrian Golan

September 24, 2019

On Monday, September 9, Israel’s National Infrastructure Committee (“NIC”) approved Energix Renewable Energies’ (“Energix”) wind energy project, which is planned to be built on almost a quarter of the limited agricultural land that Syrians still control in the occupied Syrian Golan (“Golan”). The project will now advance to Israel’s Cabinet of Ministers for final approval. If approved, the project, which was discussed at length in an Al-Marsad report and in recent Al-Marsad submissions to the United Nations, will have a disastrous impact on the native Syrian communities in the Golan. Al-Marsad condemns the NIC’s approval and calls on Israel’s Cabinet of Ministers to reject sanctioning the project.

Throughout the NIC’s review process, Al-Marsad engaged in targeted advocacy to contest Energix’s project. As part of its advocacy efforts, Al-Marsad submitted comprehensive objections to the project in collaboration with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel and Planners for Planning Rights (Bimkom). The objections were filed on behalf of Syrian agricultural cooperatives, civil society groups, and thousands of civilians who had signed a petition rejecting the project. The objections explored numerous expert opinions that addressed the troubling implications of the project. In addition to Al-Marsad’s joint objections, three local village councils, a group of Israeli settlers, and numerous other individuals filed objections with the NIC.

As articulated in the joint objections, Energix’s project will have serious consequences for the health and safety of the Syrian communities in the Golan. The project’s proximity to Syrian population centers will lead to dangerous exposure to infrasound and flickering. Syrian farmers and civilians who spend much of their time in the agricultural fields on which the project will be built will be especially vulnerable to these health impacts. Additionally, the project will occupy thousands of dunams of Syrian agricultural land in the Golan, further straining the Syrian apple and cherry industries while irreparably damaging agricultural tourism and Golani Syrian culture. Furthermore, the joint objections are rooted in experts’ belief that the project will heavily restrict the expansion of the Syrian villages of Majdal Shams and Masada. This will exacerbate the suffocating housing crisis in the Syrian villages. The project also threatens wildlife in the region, especially migratory birds such as eagles, falcons, and bats.

Al-Marsad’s targeted advocacy against Energix’s project has also included highlighting how the project violates international law because of how it targets and discriminates against Syrians. The project has been reported to provide lower payments to Syrian landowners compared to what similar projects built on Israeli owned land have paid to Israeli landowners. Additionally, the project’s location has shifted numerous times, including being moved away from Israeli settlements and closer to Syrian villages. The project also violates numerous principles embedded in international humanitarian law, including the prohibition on pillage and the permanent alteration of occupied land as well as the obligation to administer occupied land as “usufructuary.”

Despite all of this, the NIC ignored Al-Marsad’s and its partners’ objections, approving the construction of 25 wind turbines for the project. The NIC decided to postpone the approval of six other turbines due to the Israel Land Authority’s own objections to the project regarding Israel’s State ownership claims over some of the land included in the project.

Al-Marsad condemns the NIC’s endorsement of Energix's project because of its serious repercussions on all aspects of Syrians’ lives in the Golan and its violations of international law. Al-Marsad demands that Israel’s Cabinet of Ministers reject approving the project for construction. Al-Marsad also calls on the international community to exert pressure on Israel to uphold its obligations under international conventions and human rights treaties it has ratified in order to protect the basic human rights of Syrians in the Golan.

Releated Posts


'}}
Israeli Agricultural Settlement Expansion in the Occupied Syrian Golan During the Syrian Conflict
In January 2014, the Israeli cabinet approved a proposal to develop 30,000 dunams (7,400 acres) of land in the Occupied Syrian Golan for agricultural use.
'}}
Oil and natural gas in the Occupied Syrian Golan, illegal exploitation by Israel as occupying power
According to the Law of Occupation, Israel being the occupying country, has the legal obligation to act as just administrator of public property and natural resources. Nevertheless, at the beginning of 2013 Israel's Energy and Water Resources Ministry granted Genie Energy, an American-Israeli company, an exclusive licence to explore for oil and gas in a 153-square miles radius in the southern part of the Golan.
'}}
NEW PUBLICATION: EU’s guidelines on labelling of settlements products, situation in the EU and in some States Parties
Since the occupation began, the Israeli authorities have aimed to implement policies which control the valuable resources in the region, in particular the land and the water.
'}}
From Peaceful Demonstrations to Armed Conflict: Considering Humanitarian Intervention in the Case of Syria
The current conflict in Syria has developed from an excessively violent suppression of civilian protestors by Syrian State forces into an allout Civil War. Beginning in March 2011, the conflict has troubled the conscience of the international community.
'}}
Syrian Situation and the International Criminal Court, responsibility to referral and to investigate
Since the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011 the commission of war crimes and crimes against humanity by both the government and pro-government forces and the anti-government military groups has continued to escalate, leading to the worst humanitarian crisis since the Rwandan genocide.