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WATER WORLD
As neighbours build dams, Iraqis watch twin rivers dry up
By Haydar Indhar
Diwaniyah, Iraq (AFP) Aug 26, 2020

Sudan, Ethiopia vow 'all efforts' to resolve Nile dam dispute
Khartoum (AFP) Aug 25, 2020 - Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and his Ethiopian counterpart Abiy Ahmed vowed Tuesday to make every effort to resolve a dispute also involving Egypt over Addis Ababa's giant Nile river dam.

Egypt and Sudan view the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) as a threat to their vital water supplies, while upstream Ethiopia considers it crucial for its economic development and electrification.

Hamdok and Ahmed met in Khartoum and discussed the project as well as outstanding border issues and Sudan's peace talks in Juba with rebel groups. Ahmed was also scheduled to meet Sudan's ruling council chief, General Abdel Fattah al-Burhan.

"The two sides emphasised the importance of exerting all efforts to reach a successful end to the ongoing tripartite negotiations under the aegis of the African Union," said Sudan's government spokesman Faisal Saleh.

The Ethiopian premier said Hamdok would visit the gigantic dam next month.

The Nile, the world's longest river, is a lifeline supplying both water and electricity to the 10 countries it traverses.

Its main tributaries, the White and Blue Niles, converge in the Sudanese capital Khartoum before flowing north through Egypt to drain into the Mediterranean Sea.

Heavy rainfall of late in parts of the Nile catchment area have eased fears of water shortages in the short term.

Sudan, which has been hit by deadly flooding in recent weeks, said Tuesday that the Blue Nile's level had reached an all-time high in Khartoum and was expected to rise further in the coming days.

"The Blue Nile reached 17.32 metres, its highest level since the start of the recording readings more than a century ago," the water ministry said.

The official news agency SUNA quoted a ministry source as saying the high water levels was in part due to heavy rainfall on the Ethiopian plateau.

Torrential rains have pummelled Sudan for nearly a month, killing at least 83 people in floods, the civil defence said Tuesday.

With its neighbours activating new dams, Iraq's historic twin rivers could run dry -- unless new infrastructure projects and tense talks with Turkey and Iran bear fruit.

Nowhere is the effect on the country more palpable than in Basra, Iraq's only coastal province.

Here, the Tigris and Euphrates -- on which millions of Iraqis rely to farm -- meet at the Shatt al-Arab waterway before spilling into the Gulf.

But with flows already heavily weakened, seawater is pushing back into the freshwater rivers, strangling wildlife and human settlements that have survived on these banks for millennia.

"Salinity has gone up in recent years and it's killing the farmlands," said Abu Shaker, a 70-year-old who has spent decades growing Iraq's famed date palms.

Now, with such little fresh water, Abu Shaker and fellow farmers have left their ancient palms withering on cracked and salty earth, moving north in search of potable water.

"Before, we could sell our dates in the Gulf and as far as the United States," he said.

"Now, you can see with your own eyes. This whole river died."

Iraq's water woes aren't new. But with increasing regional desertification and population growth, Turkey and Iran are keener than ever to keep precious water resources for themselves.

Their new dams on the Tigris and Euphrates, and the tributaries that feed them, have reduced water flows into Iraq by half, said Baghdad's Water Minister Mehdi al-Hamdani.

But he remains hopeful, with plans in the works to improve access across the country and guarantee drinking water to all, even in a worst-case scenario.

- 'Total interruption' -

Hamdani, who headed Iraq's dams directorate before becoming minister, said there were plans to build a large reservoir in Makhoul, north of Baghdad.

"It would allow us to store more water, generate electricity and protect Baghdad in case of floods," he said.

It would be one of the biggest infrastructure projects in Iraq since 2003, when a US-led force toppled dictator Saddam Hussein and unleashed years of conflict.

Since then, government plans to rehabilitate dilapidated power grids, water networks and roads have been regularly derailed by warfare, most recently the years-long fight against the Islamic State group, which Iraq declared defeated in late 2017.

A health crisis sparked by a shortage of safe drinking water hospitalised some 100,000 people in Basra in 2018.

This year, an unprecedented fiscal crunch caused by low oil prices forced the government to suspend infrastructure investments.

But new dams alone won't save Iraq's waterways, experts warn.

Sustainable access, they say, will only be secured through water-sharing deals with Ankara and Tehran.

Talks with Turkey, which have focused on the enormous Ilisu dam on the Tigris, were suspended for two years but resumed in May, when Iraq's new cabinet came into power.

Hamdani vowed that an ongoing air and ground assault by Ankara on Kurdish militants in northern Iraq would not derail the "positive" talks, which included a deal to regulate filling the Ilisu.

Iran to the east has also activated dams, causing flows to the Dukan and Darbandikhan reservoirs in Iraqi Kurdistan to drop "from 45 cubic meters per second to seven cubic meters per second," according to the ministry.

In some parts, flows are at a meagre "two cubic metres per second -- that is to say, an almost total interruption."

Hamdani was again optimistic, however, saying comprehensive negotiations with Tehran were proceeding smoothly.

- Troubled waters ahead -

But as a receiving country, Iraq has little leverage, lamented Mohammed al-Chaleyhawi, who leads a farming cooperative in the southern agricultural heartland of Diwaniyah.

"Turkey can launch a water war at any moment, whenever it suits it," Chaleyhawi told AFP.

The droughts that wrecked Iraq's harvests between 2016 and 2018 were a taste of what may come, he said, warning that within five years, the Tigris and Euphrates could dry up, killing wildlife and limiting potable water.

"Iraq only has one solution: using economic pressure against Turkey," said Chaleyhawi, suggesting Baghdad could restrict the import of Turkish goods and services.

Others have suggested trading crude for water, like under the 1990s United Nations-led programme that allowed an Iraq under crippling sanctions to trade barrels for food and medicine.

But Iraq, OPEC's second-largest producer, needs to act fast.

Already the world is using less crude, and Iraq's nearly 40 million people need 71 billion cubic metres of water yearly, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization.

By 2035, when Turkey and Iran's dams are set to be completed, Iraq is set to receive just 51 billion cubic metres.

And the population of the "land between the two rivers" will have swelled to more than 50 million, for whom the life-giving waters could be just a distant memory.


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WATER WORLD
Sudan, Ethiopia vow 'all efforts' to resolve Nile dam dispute
Khartoum (AFP) Aug 25, 2020
Sudan's Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok and his Ethiopian counterpart Abiy Ahmed vowed Tuesday to make every effort to resolve a dispute also involving Egypt over Addis Ababa's giant Nile river dam. Egypt and Sudan view the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) as a threat to their vital water supplies, while upstream Ethiopia considers it crucial for its economic development and electrification. Hamdok and Ahmed met in Khartoum and discussed the project as well as outstanding border issues and ... read more

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