The Morning Call

Water grab along Tigris-Euphrates

Lack of compromise on river basin rights worsens imbalances

- By Samya Kullab

DAWWAYAH, Iraq, and ILISU DAM, Turkey — Next year, the water will come. The pipes have been laid to Ata Yigit’s sprawling farm in Turkey’s southeast connecting it to a dam on the Euphrates River. A dream, soon to become a reality, he says.

Over 625 miles downstream in southern Iraq, nothing grows anymore on Obeid Hafez’s wheat farm. The water stopped coming a year ago, the 95-year-old said.

The starkly different realities are playing out along the length of the Tigris-Euphrates river basin, one of the world’s most vulnerable. River flows have fallen by 40% in the past four decades as countries along its length — Turkey, Syria, Iran and Iraq — pursue rapid, unilateral developmen­t of the waters’ use.

The drop is projected to worsen as temperatur­es rise from climate change. Turkey and Iraq, the two biggest consumers, acknowledg­e they must cooperate to preserve the river system. But a combinatio­n of political failures, mistrust and intransige­nce are conspiring to prevent a deal on sharing the rivers.

The Associated Press conducted more than a dozen interviews in both countries, from top water envoys and senior officials to local farmers, and gained exclusive visits to controvers­ial dam projects. Internal reports and revealed data illustrate the calculatio­ns driving disputes behind closed doors, from Iraq’s fears of a potential 20% drop in food production to Turkey’s struggles to balance Iraq’s needs and its own.

“I don’t see a solution,”

said former Iraqi Prime Minister Haidar al-Abadi.

“Would Turkey sacrifice its own interests? Especially if that means that by giving more (water) to us, their farmers and people will suffer?”

Turkey has been harnessing the river basin with a massive project to boost agricultur­e and generate hydroelect­ricity, the Southeast Anatolia Project, or GAP by its Turkish acronym. It has built at least 19 dams on the Euphrates and Tigris, with several more planned for a total of 22. The aim is to develop Turkey’s southeast, long an economic backwater.

For the farmer, Yigit, the project will be transforma­tive. Until now, his reliance on well water only permitted half his lands to be irrigated.

But now his entire 4,500

acres will be watered next year via the Ataturk Dam on the Euphrates.

In contrast, Iraq — which relies on outside sources for nearly all its water — grows more worried with every drop diverted upstream.

In 2014, its Water Ministry prepared a confidenti­al report warning that in two years, Iraq’s water supply would no longer meet demand, and the gap would keep widening. The report, seen by the AP, said that by 2035, the water deficit would cause a 20% reduction in food production.

The report shows Iraqi officials knew how bleak the future would be without the recommende­d $180 billion in investment in water infrastruc­ture and an agreement with its neighbors. Neither has happened.

Decades of talks have still not found common ground on water-sharing.

Turkey approaches the water issue as if it were the river basin’s benevolent owner, assessing needs and deciding how much to let flow downstream. Iraq considers ownership shared and wants a more permanent arrangemen­t with defined portions.

In a rare interview, Turkey’s envoy on water issues with Iraq, Veysel Eroglu, said that Turkey cannot accept to release a fixed amount of water because of the unpredicta­bility of river flows in the age of climate change.

Eroglu said Turkey could agree to setting a ratio to release — but only if Syria and Iraq provide detailed data on their water

consumptio­n.

“That is the only way to share water in an optimal and fair manner,” Eroglu said.

Iraq refuses to provide its consumptio­n data. That’s in part because it would show the widespread water waste in Iraq and the government weakness that makes managing water nearly impossible.

Government attempts at rationing the waning water causes outrage in southern Iraq. In August in southern Dhi Qar province, for example, tribal leader Sheikh Thamer Saeedi and dozens of protesters tried to divert water from a Tigris tributary to feed his barren lands after authoritie­s failed to respond to his pleas for water.

The attempted diversion nearly sparked violence between local tribes before

security forces intervened.

Iraq blames one Turkish infrastruc­ture project in particular for these woes: the Ilusu Dam, on the Tigris.

Before Turkey began operating the dam in 2020, all the waters of Tigris flowed into Iraq. Now how much water comes down depends on Ankara’s considerat­ion of Iraq’s month-to-month requests for a minimum flow, weighed against Turkey’s own hydropower needs.

Turkey contends it is unfairly scapegoate­d.

Back in Obeid Hafez’s farm, the land is barren.

Portraits of Hafez’s forefather­s hang in his spartan living room. With his sons gone to seek work in the cities, there will be no one to till the land after him.

“Life has ended here,” he said.

 ?? ANMAR KHALIL/AP ?? A fisherman walks across a dry patch of marshes Sept. 2 in southern Iraq. The area has suffered from drought and rising salinity levels.
ANMAR KHALIL/AP A fisherman walks across a dry patch of marshes Sept. 2 in southern Iraq. The area has suffered from drought and rising salinity levels.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States