Gulf Today

Rains refill Iraq’s drought-hit main reservoirs

-

DARBANDIKH­AN: The reservoir behind the massive Darbandikh­an dam, tucked between the rolling mountains of northeaste­rn Iraq, is almost full again after four successive years of drought and severe water shortages.

Iraqi officials say recent rainfall has refilled some of the water-scarce country’s main reservoirs, taking levels to a record since 2019.

“The dam’s storage capacity is three million cubic metres. Today, with the available reserves, the dam is only missing 25 centimetre­s of water to be considered full,” Saman Ismail, director of the Darbandikh­an facility, told AFP on Sunday.

Built on the River Sirwan, the dam is located south of the city of Sulaimaniy­ah in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region.

“In the coming days, we will be able to say that it’s full,” said Ismail, with the water just a few metres below the road running along the edge of the basin. The last time Darbandikh­an was full was in 2019, and since then “we’ve only had years of drought and shortages,” said Ismail.

He cited “climate change in the region” as a reason, “but also dam constructi­on beyond Kurdistan’s borders.”

The central government in Baghdad says upstream dams built in neighbouri­ng Iran and Turkey have heavily reduced water flow in Iraq’s rivers, on top of rising temperatur­es and irregular rainfall.

This winter, however, bountiful rains have helped to ease shortages in Iraq, considered by the United Nations to be one of the five countries most vulnerable to some impacts of climate change.

In Iraq, rich in oil but where infrastruc­ture is often run-down, torrential rains have also flooded the streets of Kurdistan’s regional capital Arbil.

Four hikers died last week in floods in Kurdistan, and in Diyala, a rural province in central Iraq, houses were destroyed.

Ali Radi Thamer, director of the dam authority at Iraq’s water resources ministry, said that most of the country’s six biggest dams have experience­d a rise in water levels.

At the Mosul dam, the largest reservoir with a capacity of about 11 billion cubic metres, “the storage level is very good, we have benefitted from the rains and the floods,” said Thamer.

Last summer, he added, Iraq’s “water reserves... reached a historic low.”

“The reserves available today will have positive effects for all sectors,” Thamer said, including agricultur­e and treatment plants that produce potable water, as well as watering southern Iraq’s fabled marshes that have dried up in recent years.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Farmers sift through threshed wheat during the harvest at a farm in the Abbasiya district on Tuesday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Farmers sift through threshed wheat during the harvest at a farm in the Abbasiya district on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain