Jewish Virtual Library
Israel Science & Technology: Resource-Based Industries
Israel's reputation as a country bereft of natural resources,
surrounded by a sea of oil, is not entirely true. The Dead Sea
contains rich deposits of minerals and there are major reserves of
phosphates in the Negev desert. Together with local technological
expertise and innovative industrial processes, these resources are
the basis for a large and sophisticated chemicals industry.
Since the 1980s, this industry has rapidly developed its ability to
extract minerals and create high-value end-user products such as
fertilizers and pesticides, petrochemicals and plastics. With a
small domestic market, most of the products are sold overseas;
indeed, many of the companies in the chemicals and petrochemicals
sectors are large corporations with an increasingly global reach. In
the past five years, some $1.3 billion has been spent acquiring
foreign companies, principally in Europe and Latin America,
strengthening the industry's marketing capacity.
In 1999, resource-based industrial exports reached nearly $3
billion. Sales of chemicals have tripled over the last decade,
amounting to $8 billion – some 14% of the country's total industrial
production.
Herzl's Vision
While the considerable income generated from Israel's minerals could
not possibly have been foreseen a century ago, Theodor Herzl, the
founder of modern political Zionism, did envisage a flourishing
industry based on the mineral riches of the Dead Sea. This vision
was primarily based on the data collected by a U.S. Navy captain,
W.F. Lynch, who carried out a geological survey of the Dead Sea
region in 1848. Lynch reported that the basin - which at 400 meters
below sea level is the lowest point on earth - was rich in
phosphates, potash and bromine.
However, the region's searing heat and isolation discouraged
entrepreneurs from exploiting its resources until 1931, when Moses
Novomeysky, a Russian-born industrial pioneer, persuaded the British
Mandatory authorities to grant him a license to extract minerals
from the Dead Sea. A year later, Novomeysky opened a factory at its
northern end, and in 1934 a second plant was opened near the
biblical site of Sodom. Prior to Israel's independence in 1948, the
factory was mining 8,000 tons of potash and bromine per year and
employed 2,000 workers. However, the endeavor failed even to cover
its costs, and after Israel lost control of the northern part of the
Dead Sea during the War of Independence, the southern plant became
even more isolated.
In 1948, Israel's first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, decided to
nationalize the operation and to keep it running as a symbolic
presence at the Dead Sea. In the early years, the Dead Sea Works
failed to show a profit, but continued to operate until new
technologies caused a remarkable turnaround in the company's
fortunes.
Dead Sea Treasures
Dead Sea Works Ltd. (DSW) is now a major subsidiary of Israel
Chemical Industries Ltd. (ICL), a highly integrated and diversified
multinational corporation with sales of close to two billion dollars
annually, of which 75% is exported. ICL was privatized in 1994 (the
government retains a 2% interest) and is part owned by the Israel
Corporation (52%), with the rest of the shares traded on the Tel
Aviv Stock Exchange or owned by Canada's Potash Corporation of
Saskatchewan.
Situated on the site of the original plant near Sodom, DSW has an
exclusive license to mine a range of minerals from the Dead Sea, and
manufactures a broad selection of products for commercial use. The
change in DSW's fortunes began in the early 1980s when a new method
of increasing the concentration of potash extracted from the Dead
Sea was developed. Potash (potassium chloride - KCl), along with
nitrogen and phosphorous, is essential for plant growth and is thus
the basic ingredient in a range of fertilizers. By pouring extra
brine into production basins containing the already highly salty
water, the concentration of potash in the water was raised from 2%
to 23%. In addition, the revolutionary cold crystallization process,
developed and implemented in the 1980s, made it possible to extract
potash at moderate instead of hot temperatures, thereby cutting
energy costs. Further savings in DSW's energy bills was achieved by
the generation of electricity from the steam given off by a
by-product of the potassium. At the same time, computerization of
manufacturing functions, such as a conveyor belt that shifts the
potash through the mountains to a railway line, have also reduced
costs. Together, these innovations have enhanced the natural
advantage that DSW has over its worldwide competitors, who extract
potash from under the ground. In 1998, DSW produced a record 2.8
million tons of potash, as well as an additional 800,000 tons of
granulated potash, compacted for subsequent bulk blending with other
fertilizers. This is achieved by a workforce of 2,200, just 10% more
than it took to produce 8,000 tons 50 years ago. About 7% of the
potash is exported directly; most of the remaining amount is sold to
local fertilizer manufacturers, who then export their products. In
1998, DSW enjoyed profits of $50 million, of which 71% were derived
from potash. DSW's investment program is geared to increase
production capacity in the coming years to 3.2 million tons
annually.
The Dead Sea also contains magnesium salts, which can be mined -
using a unique technology introduced by immigrant scientists from
Russia - and cast into metal (karnelite). This process is carried
out by Dead Sea Magnesium (DSM), 65% of which is owned by DSW and
35% by the German automobile manufacturer Volkswagen. The DSM site
near Sodom, established in 1996, is the largest industrial project
in Israel. DSM produced about 25,000 tons of magnesium metal in
1998, the company's first full year of operations. Magnesium is half
the weight of aluminum, far more durable, and capable of resisting
temperatures of up to 1,800°C. Global magnesium metal consumption
reached 350,000 tons in 1998, and demand for the lightweight metal
by the automobile and aerospace industry is expected to increase
rapidly in the first decade of the 21st century.
DSW also manufactures magnesium chloride flakes and pellets, mainly
for use in de-icing, and anhydrous aluminum chloride for use as a
catalyst in organic production processes. In addition, DSW produces
a range of cosmetic products through its subsidiary Dead Sea
Laboratories, which is marketed under the name Ahava, as well as
chlorine-based products for water purification. DSW also mines
100,000 tons of table salt each year. The Dead Sea is also rich in
lithium, which could have future potential use in the nuclear energy
industry. DSW's total sales are about $500 million annually.
Dead Sea Periclase (DSP), an additional subsidiary of Israel
Chemicals, extracts magnesium salts from the Dead Sea for the
manufacture of magnesium oxide (magnesia or periclase), used by the
refractory industry for manufacturing steel able to withstand the
very high temperatures and harsh conditions in furnaces over long
periods. The magnesia is extracted from the extremely saline water
of the Dead Sea (120 times saltier than regular sea water), through
a unique decomposition process developed by local scientists. By
this method, DSP produces 100,000 tons of magnesia each year,
resulting in company sales of $50 million, more than 80% of which is
exported. The product is purer than the magnesia produced elsewhere
in the world, because no external substances are used in its
manufacture. Typical purity levels exceed 99.4% with very low
contamination levels of boron and silica. Due to this unique
chemical purity, low porosity, high mechanical strength, high
density and large crystal size, DSP's magnesia outperforms ordinary
products, and is applied in the most severe wear zones of furnaces,
as well as in slide-gates and tap-hole blocks.
Another major mineral extracted from the Dead Sea by ICL is bromine.
Through its subsidiary Dead Sea Bromine Group Ltd. (DSBG), ICL
produces over 200,000 tons of bromine compounds per year. The
company's production plants near the Dead Sea and in the Netherlands
supply 33% of the world's consumption of bromine compounds, which
are used in plastics as a flame retardant, and as organic
intermediates and monomers for specialty polymers. Bromine compounds
are also used as chemicals in water treatment, oil drilling, the
photo industry, cosmetics, air conditioners and pesticides. DSBG,
whose annual sales exceed $500 million, is aware of the
environmental damage that its products can cause. The company is
therefore a signatory to the Montreal Protocol of the United
Nations, conducts research to prevent possible damage of the ozone
layer and allocates major resources to quality control.
Phosphates, Fertilizers and Agrochemicals
Phosphate rock is mined from three sites in the Negev, south and
east of Be'er Sheva, by Rotem Amfert Negev Ltd., another company in
the ICL Group. The company extracts minerals and manufactures them
into end products. The phosphate is mined and washed making it
suitable for the manufacture of phosphoric acid, super-phosphates
and complex fertilizers. Upgraded mining equipment and new
technologies introduced in recent years have resulted in finer
materials and increased recovery rates for the raw phosphate. When
combined with potash mined from the Dead Sea and added to other
chemicals (mainly nitrogen), phosphates produce high-quality
fertilizers. The company manufactures P, PK, NPK and MKP fertilizers
as well as NPK fully soluble fertilizers. Rotem Amfert Negev's
annual sales of both raw materials and phosphate rock, as well as
downstream derivatives including phosphoric acid, specialty
chemicals, phosphate salts and fertilizers, amount to $720 million
per year, of which 95% is exported.
Fertilizers & Chemicals Ltd., a Haifa-based subsidiary of ICL,
manufactures a range of single and compounded fertilizers, both as
liquids and granules, earning the company $100 million per year. It
has developed over 100 products and over 800 product formulations,
which provide farmers with a comprehensive package of fertilizers.
These fertilizers cover the full range of nitrogen, phosphorous and
potassium formulations and the company's professionals advise
farmers in their correct use. Innovative fertilizers include fully
soluble, low-nitrate and chlorine-free formulations for use in drip
irrigation systems, and a slow-release NPK fertilizer that is
released into the ground over three months.
Other major players in the field of fertilizers include Haifa
Chemicals Ltd. and Makhteshim-Agan (MA) Industries Ltd. Owned by the
U.S.-based Trans Resources Inc., Haifa Chemicals is the world's
largest manufacturer of potassium nitrate (KNO3). KNO3 fertilizers
are completely absorbed by plants, leaving no harmful residues like
chloride or sodium. Haifa Chemicals also markets "fertigation"
systems - irrigation networks into which fertilizers can be
introduced. In addition, Haifa Chemicals manufactures
technical-grade potassium nitrate for industry. These products are
used in the manufacture of glass, TV tubes, ceramics, pyrotechnics
and heat treatment salts, as well as sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP),
used in the detergents industry. Food-grade products are used for
retaining moisture in processed meat, preventing discoloration in
processed potatoes and ensuring the "meltability" and "spreadibility"
of cheese.
MA Industries is the world's largest manufacturers of generic
pesticides and herbicides. Created by a merger of Makhteshim
Chemicals Works Ltd. and Agan Chemical Manufacturers Ltd. in 1997,
both owned by Koor Industries, MA Industries has combined sales of
over one billion dollars, over 90% of which is exported. Its shares
are traded on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. The company is ranked
10th globally in agro-chemical sales, and exports a broad range of
insecticides, fungicides, herbicides, and plant growth regulators to
over 100 countries. In recent years, MA Industries has acquired
companies in Latin America and has become a leading player in the
Brazilian agro-chemicals market, one of the largest in the world.
Ready-to-use formulations in various concentrations and combinations
are available to suit differing geographic and climatic conditions
worldwide, and technical-grade materials are supplied for
formulation by overseas manufacturers. Leading insecticides include
azinphos, carbaryl, chlorpyrifos, endosulfan, monocrotophos and
methidathion. Fungicides include captan, folpet and captafol. MA
Industries is also a global leader in the production of synthetic
aroma products for the detergent and cosmetics industries, and
manufactures fine chemicals, printing and photography chemicals,
polyester resins, various industrial chemicals and natural
antioxidants for the fast growing nutraceuticals market.
Petroleum and Plastics
Although it has established substantial overseas sales, Israel's oil
refinery and petrochemicals industry is not first and foremost
export-oriented. Oil Refineries Ltd. (ORL), a government-private
sector joint venture, was established to supply the local energy
market. ORL manufactures the full range of petroleum products used
locally, including gasoline, diesel, naphtha, kerosene, residual
fuel oil (for industry), lubrication oils and bitumen. These are
produced at its refineries in the Haifa Bay and Ashdod, while
subsidiaries produce the main raw materials for the plastics
industry. As a result of the company's sophisticated and efficient
processes, ORL generates more than 25% of its $2 billion in revenues
from exports. ORL's refineries have an annual capacity of 13 million
tons of crude oil. Emphasis is now being placed on refining more
environmentally friendly products, improving the quality of gasoline
and reducing the sulfur content of unleaded gasoline from 0.08% to
0.05%. ORL's main export products include vacuum gas oil, which is
produced from high- quality distillates at the company's new
hydrocracker unit.
ORL's subsidiary Gadiv Petrochemicals manufactures a range of
petrochemical products (90% of which is exported) including
aromatics and aliphatic solvents. Another ORL subsidiary, Carmel
Olefins Ltd., manufactures a range of monomers and polymers for both
the local and overseas plastics raw materials markets. These include
ethylene, low-density polyethylene, polypropylene and expandable
polystyrene (EPS). Israel Petrochemical Industries, also owned by
ORL, manufactures similar products including ethylene, polyethylene,
polypropylene and polystyrene. These plastics are used in the full
range of contemporary applications used in daily life, from
greenhouses to films, packaging to pipes, and in household utensils,
toys, furniture, fibers, threads and ropes. Other major
manufacturers produce organic products such as PVC, EDC and VCM and
inorganic products including chlorine, caustic soda, caustic potash,
hydrochloric acid, raw materials and intermediates for the detergent
industry, thermosetting, melamine and urea-molding compounds, resins
and adhesives, and inorganic pigments, water-based and synthetic
paints, polyurethane, epoxies, varnishes, textured coatings and
primers.
Gift of the Nile
No oil, but it looks like there is a lot of natural gas under
Israel's Mediterranean waters. Israeli and multinational companies
have been drilling and have come up with early indications of huge
natural gas reserves that could power local electricity generating
plants and industry. Natural gas may sound less exciting than oil,
but as a fuel it is cleaner and certainly no more expensive.
Conveniently, Israel discovered its first substantial reserves just
as the country was gearing up for its first large-scale imports of
gas.
While it is premature to say how much gas there is until more
exploratory wells have been drilled, there is good reason to suspect
that it is plentiful - because neighboring Egypt itself has huge
reserves. The Nile River contains organic matter - the basis for gas
- which is carried north through Egypt and deposited in the
Mediterranean Sea in an area called the Nile Cone. The organic
matter, which drifts further north to Israel's coast, is trapped by
sand and pebbles, creating gas reserves there as well.
Sources: Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs