Iraq needs 100bn cubic metres of water to restore supplies, environmental monitor warns
Iraq requires more than 100bn cubic metres of water to restore water resources to normal levels amid a sharp decline in the Tigris and Euphrates river levels, the Green Iraq environmental monitor warned on December 14.
Rainfall in Iraq has shifted from a predictable winter backbone of the economy to a volatile stress multiplier driving drought, crop losses and water crisis across the Tigris–Euphrates basin. Average annual precipitation remains low by global standards, with much of central and southern Iraq receiving around 100–200 millimetres a year and depending heavily on rain and upstream river inflows between November and April. But recent years have seen that the rainy season shorten, become more erratic and skew more toward intense events, deepening multi‑year drought while still exposing communities to flash floods.
Rainfall across Iraq has not reached required levels, with the country needing substantially increased amounts in the coming months to address drought impacts, the monitor said in a statement received by Al-Ssaa newspaper.
Declining water levels have degraded water quality in rivers, regulators and dams whilst raising saltwater intrusion in Basra governorate, the report noted.
Vast areas in central and southern Iraq, as well as the marshes, have dried up, with the winter agricultural plan at its lowest level, the monitor said, worsening the country's food security situation.
Recent rainfall does not constitute a real solution to the worsening water crisis, the monitor said, warning the crisis could escalate next summer to affect drinking water supplies.
Baghdad could be included amongst the affected governorates if the situation continues unchanged. Iraq faces mounting water stress as upstream neighbours Turkey and Iran have reduced flows into the Tigris and Euphrates through dam construction and river diversion projects.
Turkey's Ilisu Dam on the Tigris and multiple Iranian dams on tributaries feeding into Iraq have substantially cut cross-border water flows over the past decade.
Climate change has compounded the crisis, with Iraq experiencing lower rainfall, higher temperatures and more frequent dust storms.
The country's marshlands, once covering 15,000 to 20,000 square kilometres and designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2016, have shrunk dramatically as water supplies have dwindled.
Agricultural production has declined as farmers abandoned land due to water scarcity and increased soil salinity. The winter planting season, crucial for wheat and barley production, has seen cultivation areas slashed as irrigation water remains scarce, the report noted.
To counter the changing weather patterns, in August, the EU allocated €1.1mn in humanitarian funding to address the escalating water crisis in Basra, southern southern, targeting an estimated 500,000 people severely affected by poor water quality and limited access.
The emergency support will address urgent water, sanitation and hygiene needs over the next six months, focusing on the most vulnerable communities. Many of those impacted live in informal settlements on the outskirts of Basra, where the crisis has been particularly acute.


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