homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Water is running out in the Middle East

As I keep telling people, water isn’t an infinite resource – if you consume it at a high enough rate, it will run out. This is what NASA warns is already happening in the Middle East, where due to overconsumption and bad water management, an amount of freshwater almost the size of the Dead Sea […]

Mihai Andrei
February 13, 2013 @ 5:54 am

share Share

As I keep telling people, water isn’t an infinite resource – if you consume it at a high enough rate, it will run out. This is what NASA warns is already happening in the Middle East, where due to overconsumption and bad water management, an amount of freshwater almost the size of the Dead Sea has been lost.

middle_east

The study will be published by NASA in Water Resources Research, a journal of the American Geophysical Union; it examined gravimetric data over 7 years years from 2003 using a pair of gravity-measuring satellites which is part of NASA’s Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment or GRACE. The study found that Turkey, Syria, Iraq and Iran along the Tigris and Euphrates river basins had lost 144 cubic kilometers of freshwater, the second most accelerated water deplition in the world – the first being India. The most damage was caused by numerous water pumps pumping the underground water to the surface. Loss of surface lakes and rivers also cut out a big chunk.

“This rate of water loss is among the largest liquid freshwater losses on the continents,” the authors wrote in the study, noting the declines were most obvious after a drought.

The study is yet another evidence of a closing global water crisis; in the Middle East, where demands have dramatically increased due to aridic conditions and war, the effects are of course much more severe. Some impoverished countries, like Yemen, blame the waste of the richer neighbors from the oil-rich Gulf – who have created bedazzling cities in the middle of the desert, at the expensive of massive quantities of water.

Dubai requires absolutely massive quantities of water each day.

Dubai requires absolutely massive quantities of water each day.

The thing is, the Middle East already has low water reserves; if this situation perpetuates, things will become dramatic – fast. With Turkey controlling the Tigris and Euphrates headwaters, as well as the reservoirs and infrastructure of Turkey’s Greater Anatolia Project, which dictates how much water flows downstream into Syria and Iraq, only a joint water management between these three countries can help things out. If things continue this way, with Turkey diverting more and more water for its own needs (mostly irrigation), tension will definitely rise.

“They just do not have that much water to begin with, and they’re in a part of the world that will be experiencing less rainfall with climate change,” Famiglietti said. “Those dry areas are getting dryer. They and everyone else in the world’s arid regions need to manage their available water resources as best they can.”

“That decline in stream flow put a lot of pressure on northern Iraq,” Kate Voss, lead author of the study and a water policy fellow with the University of California’s Center for Hydrological Modeling in Irvine, said. “Both the UN and anecdotal reports from area residents note that once stream flow declined, this northern region of Iraq had to switch to groundwater. In an already fragile social, economic and political environment, this did not help the situation.”

Source

share Share

The world’s largest wildlife crossing is under construction in LA, and it’s no less than a miracle

But we need more of these massive wildlife crossings.

Mexico Will Give U.S. More Water to Avert More Tariffs

Droughts due to climate change are making Mexico increasingly water indebted to the USA.

Plants and Vegetables Can Breathe In Microplastics Through Their Leaves and It Is Already in the Food We Eat

Leaves absorb airborne microplastics, offering a new route into the food chain.

Scientists Create a 'Power Bar' for Bees to Replace Pollen and Keep Colonies Alive Without Flowers

Researchers unveil a man-made “Power Bar” that could replace pollen for stressed honey bee colonies.

This Caddisfly Discovered Microplastics in 1971—and We Just Noticed

Decades before microplastics made headlines, a caddisfly larva was already incorporating synthetic debris into its home.

​A ‘Google maps for the sea’, sails ​and alternative fuels: ​the technologies steering shipping towards ​lower emissions

 Ships transport around 80% of the world’s cargo. From your food, to your car to your phone, chances are it got to you by sea. The vast majority of the world’s container ships burn fossil fuels, which is why 3% of global emissions come from shipping – slightly more than the 2.5% of emissions from […]

Why the Right Way To Fly a Rhino Is Upside Down

Black rhinos are dangling from helicopters—because it's what’s best for them.

Trump-Appointed EPA Plans to Let Most Polluters Stop Reporting CO2 Emissions

One expert said it's like turning off a dying patient's monitor.

Could man's best friend be an environmental foe?

Even good boys and girls can disrupt wildlife in ways you never expected.

“Thirstwaves” Are Growing More Common Across the United States

Like heat waves, these periods of high atmospheric demand for water can damage crops and ecosystems and increase pressure on water resources. New research shows they’re becoming more severe.