In November 2008 the
Israel Union for Environmental Defense petitioned a court in
Beer Sheva to block a new plan submitted by the
Israel Land Administration to resume sand mining at Samar. The Union argued that there were feasible alternatives to mining the Sands of Samar and that anyway the available sands would not last for more than five to seven years. After the court determined that there was no legal basis for the Union's claim, an appeal was made to the
Supreme Court. In January 2011 the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal, leaving the sands' fate in the hands of the
Southern District's planning and building council. IUED proposed offering alternative sand mining sites, but the contractor who won the Land Administration's
request for tender turned down the suggestion. In May 2011, the New York-based
Green Zionist Alliance and the Israel-based
Green Movement launched a joint campaign to preserve Samar through a public petition combined with an effort to raise enough money to buy back the development rights to the dunes and preserve the area as a national park. The campaign aims to raise one million shekels (
NIS), of which more than 130,000 shekels had been pledged as of September 2011. In October 2011, environmental organizations and local residents petitioned the Land Administration's newly appointed chairman, imploring him to suspend plans to allow bulldozers onto the dunes. In January 2012, bulldozers razed one third of the dunes and environmental organizations working to save Samar — led by the Green Zionist Alliance, the Green Movement, the
Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel and the
Israel Union for Environmental Defense — successfully saved the remaining two thirds of the Samar sand dunes, which will be preserved by the state as a wilderness and recreation area. == See also ==