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| April 2001
Volume 43 Number 4 |
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World Spotlight: Battling Drought Conditions in Iran -- A Fight Against Time Iran is facing disaster if further measures aren't taken quickly to help some 37 million people hit by the worst drought in more than 30 years, United Nations (UN) agencies warned last August. People urgently need drinking water and many have lost their livestock or crops as a result of the drought, UN expert Vladimer Sakharov told the press. Sakharov, in Geneva after a 17-day mission to Iran, said that Iran's situation was "unique and unprecedented," being the combined result of two consecutive years of drought. "The extent of this year's drought could not be foreseen and the situation is only likely to get worse," he said. "Rains are expected only in November, even if sporadic rains come earlier they would not resolve anything. If no appropriate measures are taken now very quickly, we -- all of us, Iran of course, and the international community -- would all face a fully fledged disaster," he added. Sakharov visited Iran from July 22 to Aug. 8, 2000, as part of a multi-agency team of experts, which also included representatives of the UN Children's Fund, the World Health Organization and the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
Lack of proper distribution Meanwhile in Tehran, the UN warned time is running short to cope with Iran's worst drought since 1964 and called for the immediate shipment of international aid to avert a catastrophe. Local UN Director Francesco Bastagli released the final report of a UN fact-finding mission, which concluded that the "magnitude of the drought is overwhelming" and its effects could be felt for generations to come. "Iran is the country in the region best equipped to face these emergencies," Bastagli told a press conference, noting the drought has also devastated nearby Afghanistan, India, Pakistan and Tajikistan. He praised Iran's attempts to stave off the crisis caused by the second straight year of drought but the UN report concluded that "in spite of the government's efforts, its resources are already overstretched." The drought has been a sensitive issue for Iran's political system, which is accepting international aid for only the second time since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. The cost could run into hundreds of millions of dollars, with UN officials calling for emergency shipments of some 20,000 water tankers and thousands of miles of pipelines, as well as pumps and tons of chemicals.
No end in sight Some 80,000 heads of livestock are already dead, and many other animals purchased from drought-stricken farmers by the government to ease their financial crisis have had to be put down because of starvation. The report also warns that more than 60 percent of Iran's rural population may be forced to migrate to the cities, putting city-dwellers at greater risk of disease and straining resources in urban centers.
Dwindling water sources Meanwhile, Iran is likely to face an additional burden as the drought-stricken nomads from neighboring Afghanistan cross the border in search of water and pasture. These migrations will have "serious, social, economic, political and environmental ramifications," the report said. The government has pointedly said it wasn't asking for assistance from abroad but would accept it if offered, and violence has sometimes erupted in the provinces hardest hit by the crisis.
Conclusion The history of sugarcane cultivation in the Khuzestan province of southwest Iran goes back 2,000 years. Indeed, Iran was among the first nations that could refine valuable solid white sugar from sugarcane. However, 1,200 years ago the Khuzestan sugarcane fields started to degrade due to waterlogging, soil salinity and inability of farmers to cope with drainage problems. Revival of sugarcane in the region started in the mid-20th century with establishment of sugarcane estates at Haft-Tappeh -- 12,000 hectares, or ha. (1 ha. is equal to 2.47 acres) -- in 1950, at Karun (20,000 ha.) in 1965 and at Mian-Ab (10,000 ha.) more recently. Following the Islamic revolution 20 years ago, self-sufficiency in food became one of Iran's top priorities. Khuzestan started to grow sugarcane again under the Sugarcane and By-products Development Project (SBDP). Some 84,000 ha. of uncultivated land is being reclaimed for the large-scale, agro-industrial sugarcane units. The annual production of the project will eventually comprise some 700,000 tons of sugarcane, 350,000 tons of printing and writing paper, 700,000 tons of cattle feed, 100,000 tons of MDF (a wood product) and 20,000 tons of single-cell protein. The planning, design and implementation started in 1990 and a number of units are already operational. The climate is arid tropical with an annual rainfall of only 250 millimeters (mm), mostly occurring in the winter, while the soils are quite heavy (permeability varies between 0.5-1.5 meters/day). The prevailing high soil salilinity and sodicity, and presence of highly saline groundwater at shallow depth (salinity up to 63,000 milligrams/liter), have been the major constraints on the project's development.
Key role of drainage system Spacing generally varies between 40 m and 60 m. The collectors are 300-to-800 mm concrete pipes, installed at depth up to 400 cm and serve an area each of about 300 ha. Drain water is pumped into open main drains, which take the drainage water to the Karun River. The main environmental concern is the disposal of the large volume of saline drain water estimated to amount to some 250 million cubic meters (mcm) per year for Amir Kabir and the neighboring Mirza Kouchek Khan units. It's intended to reuse the drain water from these two units on salt-tolerant crops such as eucalyptus and then dispose of the remaining water using evaporation ponds. Accordingly, the Eucalyptus and By-Products Development Project is under construction on an 18,000 ha. area downstream.
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