Category Archives: Iraq

Iraq: Empty Quarter project starts pumping water to Najran

A project to exploit underground water in the Empty Quarter started pumping water to many districts of Najran on the 1st of April 2011.

“Water supplied by 17 wells in the Empty Quarter are collected at a location 130 kilometers east of Najran city before supplying to various districts,” Director General of the Water Department in Najran province Saleh Heshlan said in a statement to the Saudi Press Agency.

The wells are now capable of pumping 50,000 cubic meters of water daily and the pumped water is collected in the first pumping station in Nuqaiha, 125 kilometers east of Najran, and then pumped with the help of boosting stations, he said.

The project will benefit Al-Fahd and Athayabah districts, districts on both sides of King Abdulaziz and King Abdullah roads from the Holiday Inn to the Al-Shalal intersection.

The minister told local Arabic daily Al-Madinah that there would not be any change in water tariffs despite the fact that demands will tremendously increase in the next five years due to an increase in population and development projects.

“The ministry is currently considering plans to specify the areas in which there is a need for treated sewage water,” he added.

Source: Iraq Daily Journal, April 2, 2011

Middle East: report proposes master plan for water for peace

Blue Peace - coverThe Middle East is likely to plunge into a serious humanitarian crisis due to depletion of water resources, unless remedial measures are introduced urgently, says a new report [1]. The Strategic Foresight Group prepared the report, “The Blue Peace”, with support from the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida), and input from almost 100 leaders and experts from Israel, the Palestine Territories, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Turkey.

The report assesses the principal challenges linked to the trans-border management of resources. At present a factor of division and tension, water harbours the potential of becoming an instrument of peace and cooperation. This emerges as the report’s central thesis. Subsequently, it compiles a list of ten recommendations, calculated in the short, medium, and long terms, which are aimed to lead to pragmatic solutions.

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Iraq: Drinking water project for Amedi of $90 million

Series of 1917 $1 United States bill

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Kurdistan Ministry of Municipality and Tourism sealed Monday a contract for construction of drinking water project for Amedi area within Dohuk province.

The minister, Samir Abdullah Mustafa, singed the contract priced at 90,000,000 U.S. Dollars with the Lebanese Ster Group and Homan Ederson companies according to astatement issued by the ministry.

With this project getting underway, the town of Amedi and the townships of Deraluk, Sarsing, Qadash, and Bamarne, as well as four surrounding villages will receive 2,400 cubic meters of drinking water pre hour on average.

The project will get started soon and finished in almost two years.

Amedi area, 70 km northeast of Dohuk, 467 km north Baghdad, encompasses five townships including Bamarne, Deraluk, Sarsing.

Source: Iraq Daily Journal, February 23, 2011

IRAQ: leaking sewage affects Fallujah residents’ health

The city of Fallujah, Al Anbar Province, Iraq,...

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The sewage system in Fallujah, a city about 60 km west of Baghad, is still not working. Fallujah’s residents depend on underground septic tanks that are leaking waste onto their streets from where it eventually goes to the Euphrates, a main source of drink water for Fallujah as well as for other downstream cities.

 As a result many people have been affected by diarrhoea, tuberculosis, typhoid and other communicable diseases, affirmed Abdul-Sattar Kadhum al-Nawaf, director of the Fallujah general hospital. He said, “I not have specific numbers, but 10-15 percent of patients at the hospital had water or sewage-related diseases”.

After the invasion to IRAK the US started to build a sewage treatment plant that now after withdraw of the American forces will be handed over to a local contractor. The US has promised to provide the necessary funding for its completion but the fact is that since 2004 until 2010  not a single house is connected to the system, according to IRIN.

Sheikh Hameed al-Alwan, head of Fallujah local council said that even if the handing over were successful “unfortunately the plant will work only partially as its backbone, which is the main pipeline that sends all the waste to the main processing unit, will not be constructed because of the lack of funds.”

Other experts affirm that the Fallujah plant is only one of many others abandoned around the country.

related news: U.S. Army Engineers Bring Sewage System to Fallujah, Iraq, American.gov, 13 August 2009.

Source: IRIN, 14 July 2010

Iraq: UNESCO launches initiative to identify groundwater and alleviate water shortages

UNESCO has launched a scientific survey of Iraq’s groundwater in an effort to improve government capacity to address water scarcity in the country.

Iraq is currently facing severe water shortages across most parts of the country, with over 7.6 million Iraqis lacking access to safe drinking water, and an agriculture sector suffering from years of drought.

The programme will be undertaken in two phases. The first phase, funded by the European Union (EU) through the auspices of the United Nations Development Group (UNDG) Iraq Trust Fund, establishes an interactive database that uses Iraq’s existing hydrogeological data with a team of government experts trained to manage the database. Data and analysis gathered in Phase I will be integrated into a national survey of Iraq’s hydrogeological resources. Phase II, planned for 2011, will identify both aquifers down to 3,000 meters below the surface, study soil composition and aquifer replenishment, and prioritize areas for agricultural development.

With the availability of the new groundwater data, the government will be better able to address water shortages in worst affected areas. The project will also improve planning of new agriculture projects and enable sustainable management of Iraq’s underground aquifers. Additionally, the programme will allow Iraqi water engineers across the country to share information on groundwater resources with each other quickly and efficiently.

Source: UNESCO, 03 Oct 2010

Baghdad Urged to Tackle Water Shortage Crisis

UN report found that 100,000 Iraqis have fled their homes since 2005 due to water shortages.

Another United Nations report claims the water levels in the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers, Iraq’s primary sources of water, have fallen by more than two-thirds. The report cautioned that the vital lifelines could completely dry up by 2040.

“At the current rates, Iraq’s water supply will fall an estimated 43 billion cubic metres by 2015, far short of the 77 cubic metres that the country will need to avert a widespread humanitarian disaster,” the UN report read.

Social problems connected with water scarcity are common in Iraq: fishermen in the southern complain of a declining catches; in agricultural areas, water shortages have caused wheat production to fall by half. According to the UN, Iraq now imports 80 per cent of its food and 90 per cent of Iraq’s land is either desert or “suffering from severe desertification”.

Iraqis are calling on their incoming government to devote more energy to resolving the country’s chronic water problems, with some experts stating that water will be more important than oil in the long-term development of the county.

“There hasn’t been any confrontation or high tension stemming from the unsatisfied demands of parties over the use of water. But this should not mislead observers into thinking this is unlikely,” said Mustafa Kibargolu, a professor at Bilkent University’s international relations department.

“Unless some old water policies are purged and new ones introduced. It is a real possibility that this region will become a time bomb in terms of water rights.”

Source: Institute for War and Peace reporting, 4.6.2010

By Saleem al-Hasani, Basim al-Shara – Iraq

Iraq: Drought ‘forces 100,000 from homes’

Not war but drought has forced more than 100,000 people in northern Iraq to abandon their homes since 2005, with 36,000 more on the verge of leaving, says UNESCO.

The four-year drought and excessive well pumping have led to the collapse of an ancient system of underground aqueducts, or karez.

Only 116 of 683 karez systems are operational, according to a titled Survey of Infiltration Karez in Northern Iraq: History and Current Status of Underground Aqueducts. The study says 70 per cent of active karez have dried up. It is the first to research the effects of the droughts on the system of underground aqueducts, concludes that “swift and urgent action is needed to prevent further population displacement”. UNESCO said it considers the plight of the karez system and the migration as an early warning sign for the future of water in the area.

The study provides the Iraqi government with its first inventory of karez, UNESCO said, 84 per cent of which are located in Sulaymaniyah and 13 per cent in Erbil province. A karez can produce enough drinking water for 8640 people and 1440 households, UNESCO said. The technology was developed in ancient Persia.

“Before the onset of the drought, the greatest threats to the karez in Iraq were political turmoil, abandonment and neglect,” a UNESCO statement said. “Today, few people in Iraq know how to maintain or repair them, contributing to their state of disrepair.”

Entire communities have fled because of the lack of water, with populations declining nearly 70 per cent, UNESCO said. It cited as an example the village of Jafaron, where 44 of its 52 karez have gone dry since 2008. The lack of water has left barren 113 hectares of irrigated land.

UNESCO said it has been working with Iraq since 2007 to rehabilitate the karez system. In 2010, it will launch the Karez Initiative for Community Revitalisation, to help Iraqis rebuild the aqueducts.

Source: AAP / Yahoo! 7News, 14 Oct 2009

Turkey says more water for Iraq, Syria is unlikely

A water rights battle over the historic Tigris and Euphrates rivers simmered on [03 September 2009] as Iraq and Syria appealed for increased water flows to cope with severe drought but Turkey said it was already too overstretched.

Energy Minister Taner Yıldız said Turkey’s southeast region was also suffering from low rainfall and drought but the country was still releasing more water than it was legally obligated to its neighbors out of humanitarian concerns.

He said Turkey was releasing on average 517 cubic meters per second instead of the required 500 cubic meters per second, sacrificing its own energy needs in the process.

Turkey is advocating using water more efficiently and sustainably through joint projects instead of increasing water flows.

The meeting was called to discuss setting up joint stations to measure water volume at the rivers, as well as exchanging more information about climate and drought and creating joint education programs for more sustainable water management.

Drought-stricken Iraq has accused its upstream neighbors Turkey and Syria of taking too much from the rivers and their tributaries. The rivers’ low water flows are caused in part by the construction of dams in Turkey and Syria.

Turkey’s Environment Minister Veysel Eroglu said in opening remarks that Turkey was sacrificing energy production to release water from dams and alleviate water shortages downstream.

Nader al-Bunni, Syria’s irrigation minister, said his country was also letting more water flow into Iraq than required by agreements.

“We understand Iraq’s need for more water and we are letting 69 percent of the waters in the Euphrates for the bretheren people of Iraq. We have increased the amount from 58 percent to 69 percent,” he said.

Source: Todays Zaman, 03 Sep 2009

Iraq: water shortage threatens two million people in south of country

A water shortage described as the most critical since the earliest days of Iraq’s civilisation is threatening to leave up to 2 million people in the south of the country without electricity and almost as many without drinking water.

An already meagre supply of electricity to Iraq’s fourth-largest city of Nasiriyah has fallen by 50% during the last three weeks because of the rapidly falling levels of the Euphrates river, which has only two of four power-generating turbines left working.

[...] Down river, where the Euphrates spills out into the Shatt al-Arab waterway at the north-eastern corner of the Persian Gulf, the lack of fresh water has raised salinity levels so high that two towns, of about 3,000 people, on the northern edge of Basra have this week evacuated. “We can no longer drink this water,” said one local woman from the village of al-Fal. “Our animals are all dead and many people here are diseased.”

Iraqi officials have been attempting to grapple with the magnitude of the crisis for months, which, like much else in this fractured society, has many causes, both man-made and natural.

Two winters of significantly lower than normal rainfalls – half the annual average last year and one-third the year before – have followed six years of crippling instability, in which industry barely functioned and agriculture struggled to meet half of subsistence needs.

[...] During the last five chaotic years, many new dams and reservoirs have been built in Turkey, Syria and Iran, which share the Euphrates and its small tributaries. The effect has been to starve the Euphrates of its lifeblood, which throughout the ages has guaranteed bountiful water, even during drought. At the same time, irrigators have tried tilling marginal land in an attempt for quick yields and in all cases the projects have been abandoned.

“Not even during Saddam’s time did we face the prospect of something so grave,” said Nasiriyah’s governor, Qusey al-Ebadi. Just east of the city, the Marsh Arabs are also on the edge of a crisis – unprecedented even during the three decades of reprisals they faced under the former dictator.

“The current level of the Euphrates cannot feed the small tributaries that give water to the marshlands,” he continued. “The people there have started to dig wells for their own survival. There is no water to use for washing, because it is stagnant and contaminated. Many of the animals have contracted disease and died and people with animals are leaving their areas.”

Nowhere is Iraq’s water shortage more stark than in what used to be the marshlands. [...] The Euphrates, once broad and endlessly green [...] has now dropped more than 1.5m.

[...] Further up the river Sheikh Amar Hameed, 44, from Abart village said: “We have lost the soul of our lives with the vanishing water. We have lost everything. We are buying drinking water now. The government must find a solution. The young will all become thieves. They have no prospects.”

Iraq’s water minister, Dr Abdul Latif Rashid, this week estimated that up to 300,000 marshland residents are on the move, many of them newly uprooted and heading for nearby towns and cities that can do little to support them.

The Marsh Arabs are semi-nomadic and large numbers have remained displaced since Saddam drained the marshes in 1991.

[...] Officials have tried to compensate by digging wells and bores, especially in the ravaged provinces of the south and in Anbar, west of Baghdad. Delegations have also travelled to Turkey and Syria, where they were warmly received, but have achieved few changes. “We were expecting much more of a release from Turkey,” Iraq’s water minister Dr Abdul Latif Rashid said. “Iran has been less receptive. We have had no response from them at all.”

Source: Martin Chulov, Guardian, 26 Aug 2009

Iraq warns Turkey on Euphrates water supplies

Iraq called on Turkey on Sunday [07 June 2009] to release more water down the Euphrates river, saying the country’s farms and drinking water supplies were at stake. Turkish authorities told a visiting Iraqi lawmaker last month they had boosted the flow of the Euphrates through Turkish dams upstream of Iraq to help farmers cope with drought. But Iraq’s Water Resources Minister Abdul Latif Rasheed told Turkey on Sunday [07 June 2009] nothing had been done, his ministry said. “The minister asked that the flow of water be increased by 500 cubic metres per second,” it said in a statement.

[...] Iraq accuses Turkey, and to a lesser extent Syria, of choking the Euphrates with hydroelectric dams that have restricted the flow, damaging the farm sector already suffering from decades of war, sanctions and neglect. The dispute is a delicate diplomatic issue for Iraq as it seeks to improve ties with its neighbours. Turkey is one of Iraq’s most important trading partners.

“We are passing through an emergency and the country is threatened with an environmental and humanitarian catastrophe,” said Karim al-Yaqubi, a member of a parliamentary committee that oversees water issues.
He said water purification plants in parts of the country like the province of Diwaniya, southeast of Baghdad, could not pump in water because it was too muddy. Yaqubi said Turkey had briefly increased the river flow to serve its hydroelectric operations, but had then closed the sluice gates. Farmers faced with the start of the planting season between the Tigris and Euphrates south of Baghdad were in dire trouble because they did not have enough water for irrigation, he added.

On Saturday [06 Jun 2009], farmers and fishermen demonstrated in the city of Najaf, waving leaflets that called on the government to demand Iraq’s neighbours release more water.

[...] Turkey had been expected to add 130 cubic metres per second of water to the flow down the Euphrates, taking the total flow to Iraq up to 360 cubic metres per second, from 230 cubic metres per second, officials said.

Source: Aseel Kami, Reuters, 07 Jun 2009