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hatrack

(59,592 posts)
Fri Dec 18, 2015, 09:25 AM Dec 2015

Iran Barely Staying Ahead Of 7-Year Drought; Farms & Orchards Dying As Groundwater Depletes

POUZE KHOON, Iran — The early-morning sun meagerly brightened the gloom of this sad township, a collection of empty, crumbling houses along a highway through the dusty desert landscape in southeastern Iran. Until a decade or so ago, Amin Shoul would come here every year to help his father harvest pistachios, the nuts that are as much a symbol of Iran as caviar. Now, with the last reserves of groundwater tapped out, the family’s grove and the seemingly endless fields beyond it are filled with dead trees, their bone-colored branches a deathly contrast to the turquoise sky.

Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years ago, leaving the house to squatters, unemployed laborers living off meager government stipends — and even they had started to leave. “I don’t see how we can ever return to the past,” he remarked, matter-of-factly. As Iran emerges from isolation after signing a nuclear agreement with the West, attention has focused on its business relations, particularly in the oil and airline industries. But Iran needs expertise in a number of areas, including the environment. Most pressing in that regard is its impending water crisis.

Iran is in the grip of a seven-year drought that shows no sign of breaking and that, many experts believe, may be the new normal. Even a return to past rainfall levels might not be enough to head off a nationwide water crisis, since the country has already consumed 70 percent of its groundwater supplies over the past 50 years. Always arid, Iran is facing desertification as lakes and rivers dry up and once-fertile plains become barren. According to the United Nations, Iran is home to four of the 10 most polluted cities in the world, with dust and desertification among the leading causes.

In Zanjan, in central Iran, the historic Mir Baha-eddin Bridge crosses a riverbed of sand, stones and weeds. In Gomishan, on the shores of the Caspian Sea, the fishermen who once built houses on poles surrounded by freshwater now have to drive for miles to reach the receding shoreline. In Urmia, close to the Turkish border, residents have held protests to demand that the government return water to a once-huge lake that is now the source only of dust storms. More than 15 percent of the approximately 150,000 acres of pistachio trees in the main producing area in Kerman Province have died in the last decade or so.

EDIT

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/12/19/world/middleeast/scarred-riverbeds-and-dead-pistachio-trees-in-a-parched-iran.html

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Iran Barely Staying Ahead Of 7-Year Drought; Farms & Orchards Dying As Groundwater Depletes (Original Post) hatrack Dec 2015 OP
And global warming will only make it worse. DetlefK Dec 2015 #1
People will put up with a lot of hardship and cruelty until... NeoGreen Dec 2015 #2

DetlefK

(16,423 posts)
1. And global warming will only make it worse.
Fri Dec 18, 2015, 10:06 AM
Dec 2015

Temperatures in the shallow Persian Gulf region are predicted to increase over the next 2 decades.

Eastern Saudi-Arabia, Bahrain, Qatar and the UAE will be especially hard-hit. There might be one or two days of summer where it gets so hot that staying outside is lethal.

NeoGreen

(4,031 posts)
2. People will put up with a lot of hardship and cruelty until...
Fri Dec 18, 2015, 09:56 PM
Dec 2015

...their children start to starve.

When children starve, nations tend to fall.

Nations are a human construct that serve to maintain a predictable level of equilibrium.

When constructs lose their equilibrium, chaos follows.

Unfortunately, chaos usually prefers to be uncontrollable.

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