20 June 2010

The rivers of the world are dying

The title of this post is hyperbole, but the phenomenon is real.  Most well-informed Americans are aware that the Colorado River no longer reaches the Pacific Ocean, because the water is "harvested" en route.  Many other rivers are undergoing similar fates; the New York Times now reports the same phenomenon at the Shatt al Arab in Iraq:
Withered by decades of dictatorial mismanagement and then neglect, by drought and the thirst of Iraq’s neighbors, the river formed by the convergence of the Tigris and the Euphrates no longer has the strength to keep the sea at bay...

The salt water of the gulf now pushes up the Faw peninsula. Last year, for the first time in memory, it extended beyond Basra, Iraq’s biggest port city, and even Qurna, where the two rivers meet. It has ravaged fresh-water fisheries, livestock, crops and groves of date palms that once made the area famous, forcing the migration of tens of thousands of farmers...

Turkey, Syria and Iran have all harnessed the headwaters that flow into the Tigris and Euphrates and ultimately into the Shatt al Arab, leaving Iraqi officials with little to do but plead for them to release more from their modern networks of dams...
In addition to drying up from water extraction, the remaining river water is grossly polluted:
In Basra and in the villages that cling to the Iraqi shore of the Shatt, the impact of the disaster has been profound. The fresh waters that once flushed the canals of Basra — the Venice of the Middle East, it was called, though long ago — are fetid and filled with garbage...

Mr. Mutashar said that Iraq’s acceptable level of salt in the Shatt’s fresh water was 1,500 parts per million; last year the level reached 12,000.

Faris Jassim al-Imara, a chemist at the University of Basra’s Marine Science Center, said he had recorded levels as high as 40,000 parts per million, as well as heavy metals and other pollutants flowing from the north and from Iran’s oil refinery at Abadan, where enormous pipes steadily discharge waste water...
Photo credit Holly Pickett for The New York Times.

1 comment:

  1. Water is life. Communities were born beside rivers. Where there are rivers there is food.
    It seems that a lot of people have forgotten where we came from and where we belong.
    What a shame.

    ReplyDelete