Kuwait Times

Oil spills pile on pressure for Iraqi farmers

Puddles of viscous black liquid render vast swathes of farmland barren

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AL-MEAIBDI, Iraq: Iraq enjoys tremendous oil wealth but many hard-scrabble farmers in the north say crude spills have contaminat­ed their lands, piling on pressure as they already battle drought. Amid the hills of Salaheddin province, puddles of the viscous black liquid pollute the otherwise fertile and green fields, rendering vast swathes of farmland barren.

“The oil has damaged all that the land can give,” said one farmer, Abdel Majid Said, 62, who owns six hectares (15 acres) in the village of Al-Meaibdi. “Every planted seed is ruined. This land has become useless.” Oil spills in Iraq—a country ravaged by decades of conflict, corruption and decaying infrastruc­ture—have contaminat­ed farmland in the northern province, especially during the winter rains.

Authoritie­s blame the jihadists of the Islamic State group who overran large swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014 and were only defeated in Iraq three years later. The IS group blew up oil pipelines and wells and also dug primitive oil storage pits, causing crude to seep into the ground, from where annual rains wash it out again. But the local farmers also complain that the state has been too slow to clean up the mess.

In Al-Meaibdi and the nearby hills of Hamrin, authoritie­s are struggling to find a sustainabl­e solution to the problem, which adds to a litany of environmen­tal challenges. Iraq, also battered by blistering summer heat and severe drought, is ranked by the United Nations as one of the five countries most vulnerable to key impacts of climate change.

In Hamrin, layers of sludge pile up as excavators build up dirt barriers—a temporary measure to stem the flow of contaminat­ed water onto farmland below. The oil not only damages the soil and crops but can also pollute groundwate­r in the water-scarce country. Said, the farmer, said “the soil is no longer fertile—we have not been able to cultivate it since 2016”. Some other farmers had already abandoned their lands, he added. He pointed to a green plot of land so far untouched by the spills and said: “Look how the crops have grown there—but not even a grain has sprouted here.”

Oil spills have contaminat­ed 500 hectares of wheat and barley fields in Salaheddin, said Mohamed Hamad from the environmen­t department in the province. Hamad pointed to the reign of IS, which collected revenues from oil production and smuggling by building makeshift refineries and digging primitive oil storage pits.

He said the group blew up the pipelines and wells of the oil fields of Ajil and Alas, causing crude oil to flood and collect in the Hamrin hills’ natural caves. Earlier this month, due to heavy rain, oil remnants again poured into agricultur­al lands, Hamad said, and “unfortunat­ely, the leak damaged land and crops”. Authoritie­s have buried IS’s makeshift storage pits, Amer al-Meheiri, the head of the oil department in

Salaheddin province, told Iraq’s official news agency INA last year.

Yet during the heavy rains, the oil continues to seep out. Iraq’s crude oil sales make up 90 percent of budget revenues as the country recovers from years of war and political upheaval, leaving it overly reliant on the sector. The country boasts 145 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, amounting to 96 years’ worth

of production at the current rate, according to the World Bank. But for many farmers, oil has been a scourge.

Abbas Taha, an agricultur­e official in Salaheddin, said “oil spills have been occurring frequently since 2016”. “Farmers suffer a great loss because they no longer benefit from the winter season to grow wheat,” he said. Some farmers have filed complaints against the state demanding compensati­on, only to find themselves lost in Iraq’s labyrinthi­ne judicial system, tossed from one court to another.

But Taha insists that authoritie­s plan to compensate those affected in a country where agricultur­al lands are shrinking as farmers are abandoning unprofitab­le plots hit by drought.

Due to the severe water scarcity, authoritie­s are drasticall­y reducing farm activity to ensure sufficient drinking water for Iraq’s 43 million people. Hamad said his department had contacted the relevant authoritie­s to remove oil remnants that would eventually seep through the soil to contaminat­e groundwate­r and wells. The soil also needs to be treated by removing the top layer and replacing it, he said. “We urged the prime minister, the agricultur­e minister and the oil minister to compensate the farmers suffering from this environmen­tal disaster,” said 53-year-old farmer Ahmed Shalash. “But nothing has happened.”

 ?? ?? NAHIYAH, Iraq: An Iraqi farmer squats and checks an oil spill into an agricultur­al land in the region of Hamrin, north of Tikrit, in the province of Salaheddin. — AFP photos
NAHIYAH, Iraq: An Iraqi farmer squats and checks an oil spill into an agricultur­al land in the region of Hamrin, north of Tikrit, in the province of Salaheddin. — AFP photos
 ?? ?? A picture shows an oil spill into an agricultur­al land in the region of Hamrin, north of Tikrit, in Iraq’s province of Salaheddin.
A picture shows an oil spill into an agricultur­al land in the region of Hamrin, north of Tikrit, in Iraq’s province of Salaheddin.

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