Zürcher Nachrichten - Rampant water pollution threatens Iraq's shrinking rivers

EUR -
AED 4.245422
AFN 73.401814
ALL 95.804757
AMD 435.965634
ANG 2.068976
AOA 1059.867575
ARS 1591.163342
AUD 1.662972
AWG 2.083038
AZN 1.966265
BAM 1.94891
BBD 2.329145
BDT 141.920077
BGN 1.975617
BHD 0.436399
BIF 3432.721897
BMD 1.155799
BND 1.478337
BOB 7.991127
BRL 6.053954
BSD 1.156401
BTN 108.778233
BWP 15.76003
BYN 3.427501
BYR 22653.652921
BZD 2.326027
CAD 1.596106
CDF 2635.220696
CHF 0.915164
CLF 0.026847
CLP 1060.08668
CNY 7.976748
CNH 7.978414
COP 4279.228805
CRC 537.719801
CUC 1.155799
CUP 30.628663
CVE 110.523215
CZK 23.997735
DJF 205.408705
DKK 7.471799
DOP 69.781379
DZD 153.347817
EGP 60.718954
ERN 17.336979
ETB 181.799172
FJD 2.574194
FKP 0.863643
GBP 0.864786
GEL 3.114871
GGP 0.863643
GHS 12.656569
GIP 0.863643
GMD 84.948126
GNF 10147.912253
GTQ 8.850937
GYD 241.963368
HKD 9.036323
HNL 30.65145
HRK 7.534532
HTG 151.649086
HUF 387.012298
IDR 19497.166894
ILS 3.601295
IMP 0.863643
INR 108.589009
IQD 1514.09619
IRR 1517736.956086
ISK 143.180131
JEP 0.863643
JMD 182.16069
JOD 0.81949
JPY 184.317547
KES 149.965029
KGS 101.073668
KHR 4638.219471
KMF 493.525975
KPW 1040.235338
KRW 1738.575448
KWD 0.354391
KYD 0.963739
KZT 557.988928
LAK 24947.91342
LBP 103501.765934
LKR 363.707242
LRD 212.261977
LSL 19.579412
LTL 3.412773
LVL 0.699131
LYD 7.368225
MAD 10.780717
MDL 20.221468
MGA 4819.680415
MKD 61.615606
MMK 2427.370797
MNT 4125.586287
MOP 9.313179
MRU 46.382229
MUR 53.71034
MVR 17.85711
MWK 2007.622765
MXN 20.545711
MYR 4.582161
MZN 73.857548
NAD 19.567341
NGN 1601.717471
NIO 42.440814
NOK 11.204655
NPR 174.048174
NZD 1.990012
OMR 0.444409
PAB 1.156466
PEN 3.999644
PGK 4.980913
PHP 69.343255
PKR 322.525259
PLN 4.275473
PYG 7524.462005
QAR 4.21169
RON 5.094294
RSD 117.419875
RUB 93.618683
RWF 1687.465983
SAR 4.336132
SBD 9.294975
SCR 16.325644
SDG 694.635484
SEK 10.810057
SGD 1.481156
SHP 0.867148
SLE 28.374686
SLL 24236.531641
SOS 659.961346
SRD 43.158092
STD 23922.697853
STN 24.73409
SVC 10.119354
SYP 128.233843
SZL 19.531726
THB 37.75127
TJS 11.07381
TMT 4.045295
TND 3.395158
TOP 2.782885
TRY 51.232737
TTD 7.863504
TWD 36.902912
TZS 2970.470673
UAH 50.773748
UGX 4278.982517
USD 1.155799
UYU 46.815494
UZS 14100.743605
VES 534.0834
VND 30455.293595
VUV 138.127264
WST 3.164809
XAF 653.674182
XAG 0.016216
XAU 0.000256
XCD 3.123604
XCG 2.084312
XDR 0.811939
XOF 651.301235
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.831064
ZAR 19.578083
ZMK 10403.583014
ZMW 21.655467
ZWL 372.166684
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    22.68

    +0.22%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    22.91

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.3000

    15.9

    +1.89%

  • BCC

    1.0800

    74.65

    +1.45%

  • BCE

    -0.3400

    25.49

    -1.33%

  • NGG

    1.9600

    84.29

    +2.33%

  • RIO

    0.7700

    87.54

    +0.88%

  • BTI

    0.6900

    58.45

    +1.18%

  • JRI

    0.2400

    12.1

    +1.98%

  • AZN

    1.3600

    187.14

    +0.73%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.72

    +0.41%

  • GSK

    1.7500

    54.7

    +3.2%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    32.47

    +0.03%

  • BP

    0.6200

    45.41

    +1.37%

Rampant water pollution threatens Iraq's shrinking rivers
Rampant water pollution threatens Iraq's shrinking rivers / Photo: AHMAD AL-RUBAYE - AFP

Rampant water pollution threatens Iraq's shrinking rivers

Stricken by drought and depleted by upstream dams, Iraq's once mighty rivers the Tigris and Euphrates are suffocating under pollutants from sewage to medical waste.

Text size:

In a country where half the population lacks access to safe drinking water, according to UN figures, state institutions are to blame for a man-made disaster which is turning rivers into waste dumps.

"What is strange about water pollution in Iraq is that most government institutions are responsible for it," Khaled Shamal, the ministry of water resources spokesman, told AFP.

He warned that Iraq's sewage network dumps "large quantities" of wastewater into the two major waterways, after superficial treatment or none at all.

"Most hospitals near a river dump their medical waste and sewage straight into it," Shamal added. "It is dangerous and catastrophic."

Dirty and unsafe water is a prime health threat in Iraq, where decades of conflict, mismanagement and corruption have taken a toll on infrastructure, including the water system.

Petrochemical factories, power plants and agricultural drainage that carries fertilisers and other toxins further pollute Iraq's water.

- Overloaded with toxins -

In the country known as "the land of two rivers", water pollution has become so severe that it is now visible to the naked eye.

In Baghdad's eastern suburbs, AFP filmed a pipe discharging green-coloured water with a foul odour into the Diyala river.

Ali Ayoub, a water specialist from the UN children's agency UNICEF, warned that Baghdad's two main water treatment plants are overloaded with twice their intended capacity.

The treatment facilities were built for a population of three to four million, but at least nine million live in Baghdad today.

"Inadequate infrastructure, limited regulations and poor public awareness are the main factors contributing to the significant deterioration of water quality in Iraq", Ayoub said.

"Two-thirds of industrial and household wastewater are discharged untreated into the rivers," amounting to six million cubic metres a day.

But Iraq's government is taking steps to improve water quality, he said.

The government has said it no longer approves projects that could be a source of pollution unless they provide water treatment.

It has developed a three-year plan to "strengthen the water and sanitation system" to provide "safe drinking water, especially to the most vulnerable communities", Ayoub said.

In partnership with UNICEF, Baghdad's Medical City –- a complex of hospitals with 3,000 beds, on the banks of the Tigris –- has recently inaugurated a water treatment plant, Akil Salman, the complex's projects manager, told AFP.

The facility has started operating with three units, each capable of treating 200 cubic metres of waste a day. Four additional units with a capacity of 400 cubic metres each are expected to be completed "within two months".

Instead of directing its wastewater to Baghdad's overburdened treatment facilities, the Medical City can use the treated water for the hospitals' gardens and to fill the firefighters' tanks, Salman said.

- 'We have to buy water' -

Iraq, which endures blistering summer heat and regular sandstorms, is one of the five countries most impacted by some effects of climate change, says the United Nations.

The country of 43 million people has suffered four consecutive years of withering drought, and water scarcity has become extreme.

It is worsened, according to authorities, by upstream dams built by Iraq's neighbours Iran and Turkey, lowering water levels in the Tigris and Euphrates, which have irrigated Iraq for millennia.

The water flow to Iraq "has declined significantly, leading to an increase in the concentration of pollutants in the water", environment ministry spokesperson Amir Ali Hassoun said.

Previously, authorities routinely opened valves to increase the river flow and dilute pollutants, but this strategy has become impossible due to a shortage of water which has forced them to look for other options.

In addition to "raising awareness" among the population, Iraqi officials say they are closely monitoring wastewater management.

"Hospitals are required to install wastewater treatment facilities," Hassoun said.

"We hope that 2024 will be the year we eliminate all violations," referring to hospitals dumping untreated sewage and medical waste into the rivers.

In Iraq's south, water pollution is much worse.

"Wastewater from other areas is discharged into the river, polluting the water that reaches us," said 65-year-old Hassan Zouri from the southern province of Dhi Qar.

"The water carries diseases. We cannot drink it or use it at all," added the father of eight.

"We used to rely on the river for drinking, washing, and irrigation, but now we have to buy water."

H.Roth--NZN