Hartford Courant

Iraqi farmers are left with flood of misery over water scarcity

- By Samya Kullab

BAGHDAD — Salah Chelab crushed a husk of wheat plucked from his sprawling farmland south of Baghdad and inspected its seeds in the palm of one hand. They were several grams lighter than he hoped.

“It’s because of the water shortages,” he said, the farm machine roaring behind him, cutting and gathering his year’s wheat harvest.

Chelab had planted most of his 10 acres of land, but he was only able to irrigate a quarter of it after the Agricultur­e Ministry introduced strict water quotas during the growing season, he said. The produce he was growing on the rest of it, he fears, “will die without water.”

As worldwide prices for wheat have soared due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Iraqi farmers say they are paying the price for a government decision to cut irrigation for agricultur­al areas by 50%.

The government took the step in the face of severe water shortages arising from high temperatur­es and drought — believed to be fueled by climate change — and ongoing water extraction by neighborin­g countries from the Tigris and Euphrates rivers.

All those factors have heavily strained wheat production.

Wrestling with the water shortage, Iraq’s government has been unable to tackle other long-neglected issues.

Desertific­ation has been blamed as a factor behind this year’s relentless sandstorms.

At least 10 have hit the country in the past few months, covering cities with a thick blanket of orange dust, grounding flights and sending thousands to hospitals.

“We need water to solve the problem of desertific­ation, but we also need water to secure our food supplies,” said Essa Fayadh, a senior official at the Environmen­t Ministry. “We don’t have enough for both.”

Iraq relies on the Tigris and Euphrates rivers for nearly all of its water needs. Both flow into Iraq from Turkey and Iran. Those countries have constructe­d dams that have either blocked or diverted water, creating major shortages in Iraq.

Water Resources Minister Mahdi Rasheed said river levels were down 60% compared to last year.

For Chelab, less water has meant a smaller grain size and lower crop yields.

In 2021, Chelab produced 30,000 tons of wheat, the year before that 32,000, receipts from Trade Ministry silos show. This year, he expects no more than 10,000.

His crops are both rainfed and irrigated via a channel from the Euphrates. Due to low precipitat­ion levels, he has had to rely on the river water during the growing season, he said.

Government officials say change is necessary.

The current system has been inefficien­t and unsustaina­ble for decades. Water scarcity is leaving them no choice but to push to modernize antiquated and wasteful farming techniques.

“We have a strategic plan to face drought considerin­g the lack of rain, global warming, and the lack of irrigation coming from neighborin­g countries as we did not get our share of water entitlemen­ts,” said Hamid al-naif, spokesman at the Agricultur­e Ministry.

The ministry took measures to devise new types of drought-resistant wheat and introduce methods to increase crop yields.

“We are still dealing with irrigation systems of the 1950s. It has nothing to do with the farmers,” he said. “The state must make it efficient, we must force the farmer to accept it.”

Iraqi farmers have historical­ly been heavily dependent on the state in the production of food, a reliance that policymake­rs and experts said drains government funds.

The Agricultur­e Ministry supports farmers by providing everything from tools, seeds, fertilizer­s and pesticides at a subsidized rate or for free.

Water diverted from rivers for irrigation is given at no cost.

The Trade Ministry then stores or buys produce from farmers and distribute­s it to markets.

Wheat is a key strategic crop, accounting for 70% of total cereal production in the country. Planting starts in October and harvest typically begins in April and extends to June in some areas. Last year, the Agricultur­e Ministry slashed subsidies for fertilizer­s, seeds and pesticides, angering farmers.

Local demand for the staple is between 5 million and 6 million tons a year. In 2021, Iraq produced 4.2 million tons of wheat, according to the Agricultur­e Ministry. In 2020, it was 6.2 million tons.

“Today, we might get 2.5 million tons at best,” said al-naif.

Most of the wheat harvest is usually sold to the Trade Ministry. In a sign of the low harvest, so far there are currently only 373,000 tons of wheat available in Trade Ministry storehouse­s, al-naif said.

To meet demands amid the recent global crisis in the grain market, the government recently changed a policy to allow all Iraqi farmers to sell their produce to the Trade Ministry silos.

Previously, this was limited to farmers who operated within the government plan.

Back in Chelab’s farm, the wheat is ready to be transporte­d to the silo.

“It’s true we need to develop ourselves,” he said. “But the change should be gradual, not immediate.”

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