Iraq eyes Turkey as farm ’disaster’ looms

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Iraq eyes Turkey as farm ’disaster’ looms
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Mayıs 21, 2009 00:00

BAGHDAD - Iraq faces an agricultural "disaster" this summer if Turkey continues to retain waters from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, which have sustained Iraqi agriculture for millennia, experts say.

The controversy over the sharing of the mighty rivers at the root of Iraq's ancient name of Mesopotamia Ğ meaning "between the rivers" in Greek Ğ is almost as old as the country itself. But for Baghdad, the current shortage demands an urgent response from Turkey.

The reserves of all Iraqi dams at the beginning of May totaled 11 billion cubic meters of water, compared to over 40 billion three years ago, although rain has not been below normal levels this winter. The Euphrates is the most worrying situation. Reserves at Haditha dam in the country’s west, the first on the river, amounted to just 1.5 billion cubic meters on May 1, compared to eight billion two years ago. "If the water level in the Euphrates continues to decrease, there will be a disaster in July because it will not be possible to irrigate crops," said Aoun Thiab Abdullah.

"The drought will cause displacement," he said, noting that Iraqi agriculture depends on river water for 90 percent of its irrigation.

The negative impact on farming is already being felt in some provinces, including Najaf in the south that has banned its farmers from planting rice because it requires heavy irrigation.

"We will focus this year on the provision of drinking water and irrigation for other crops demanding less water," said the director of the Center for Water Resources in Najaf, Modhar al-Bakaa.

The situation worsens as one moves down the Euphrates, according to Karim al-Yakubi, chairman of the agriculture and water committee in Iraq’s parliament.

Yakubi said he fears an environmental disaster in the marshes of Nasiriyah farther south and notes that the lower water quantities increase the salinity of the river.

Iraqi experts say the problem is the many dams Turkey has built over the past 30 years to irrigate its agricultural lands in the southeast. These dams allow Turkey to regulate the flow of rivers according to its needs.

The flow speed of the Euphrates, which runs from Turkey through Syria, is currently only 230 cubic meters per second, down from the 2000 level of 950 cubic meters per second.

Iraqi authorities have repeatedly sent letters to Ankara requesting that Turkey allow the Euphrates to flow at 700 cubic meters a second, but apparently to little avail.

On the Tigris, the situation is not as serious but Baghdad is worried by Turkey's gigantic Ilısu dam project, which, when finished, will have a capacity greater than 10 billion cubic meters.

Turkish President Abdullah Gül promised in March to double the quota of water allocated to Iraq, during a historic visit to Baghdad, the first by a Turkish head of state in 33 years.

But the promise was not kept, according to the Iraqi National Center for Water Resources’ Director Abdullah, who notes that the only bilateral treaty on water sharing came in 1946 when Iraq was hit by fears of flooding.

Under that agreement, Ankara had to inform its neighbor of any project likely to affect the flow of the rivers. "Turkey no longer pays attention to us," said Abdullah.

To raise the profile of the water crisis, the Iraqi parliament last week passed a bill demanding that the issue of water now be included in all agreements with Ankara, parliament’s Yakubi said.
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