Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Leave our marshes alone': Iraqis fear oil drilling would destroy fabled wetlands

EUR -
AED 4.252096
AFN 80.749442
ALL 98.005372
AMD 444.007134
ANG 2.072156
AOA 1060.578172
ARS 1376.619913
AUD 1.77395
AWG 2.084105
AZN 1.966755
BAM 1.952918
BBD 2.337251
BDT 141.461243
BGN 1.954776
BHD 0.436725
BIF 3446.613763
BMD 1.157836
BND 1.480396
BOB 7.999092
BRL 6.419275
BSD 1.157577
BTN 98.930715
BWP 15.445007
BYN 3.788261
BYR 22693.592611
BZD 2.325238
CAD 1.576064
CDF 3331.095596
CHF 0.941778
CLF 0.028111
CLP 1078.750651
CNY 8.328665
CNH 8.307065
COP 4834.036264
CRC 586.427001
CUC 1.157836
CUP 30.682663
CVE 110.10252
CZK 24.789431
DJF 206.133135
DKK 7.459133
DOP 68.399357
DZD 150.575339
EGP 57.62434
ERN 17.367545
ETB 158.72501
FJD 2.593843
FKP 0.854144
GBP 0.851849
GEL 3.173091
GGP 0.854144
GHS 11.865336
GIP 0.854144
GMD 81.622136
GNF 10030.198236
GTQ 8.895872
GYD 242.179473
HKD 9.088234
HNL 30.212936
HRK 7.529874
HTG 151.876529
HUF 401.155829
IDR 18762.622393
ILS 4.11634
IMP 0.854144
INR 99.085377
IQD 1516.468666
IRR 48744.910115
ISK 144.057708
JEP 0.854144
JMD 185.34648
JOD 0.820894
JPY 166.507263
KES 149.595346
KGS 101.253109
KHR 4643.08795
KMF 496.151093
KPW 1042.031524
KRW 1571.681777
KWD 0.354078
KYD 0.964664
KZT 591.537275
LAK 24984.805738
LBP 103718.896248
LKR 346.240541
LRD 231.515349
LSL 20.603994
LTL 3.41879
LVL 0.700364
LYD 6.324667
MAD 10.538548
MDL 19.82948
MGA 5172.300125
MKD 61.4963
MMK 2430.663783
MNT 4144.581531
MOP 9.359067
MRU 45.770456
MUR 52.391917
MVR 17.836448
MWK 2007.211913
MXN 21.902686
MYR 4.88718
MZN 74.043549
NAD 20.60435
NGN 1781.052817
NIO 42.597139
NOK 11.515852
NPR 158.286414
NZD 1.909534
OMR 0.445184
PAB 1.157577
PEN 4.206093
PGK 4.833867
PHP 64.480481
PKR 326.384358
PLN 4.271318
PYG 9237.368231
QAR 4.221271
RON 5.030685
RSD 117.242172
RUB 92.338228
RWF 1647.447486
SAR 4.343317
SBD 9.660848
SCR 16.737243
SDG 695.285746
SEK 10.936367
SGD 1.481585
SHP 0.909878
SLE 25.501366
SLL 24279.24975
SOS 661.523776
SRD 43.304953
STD 23964.874942
SVC 10.129052
SYP 15054.157512
SZL 20.590614
THB 37.515766
TJS 11.732035
TMT 4.052427
TND 3.424946
TOP 2.711767
TRY 45.552657
TTD 7.853309
TWD 34.14225
TZS 2993.007302
UAH 47.995872
UGX 4150.874471
USD 1.157836
UYU 47.829417
UZS 14639.39635
VES 116.031641
VND 30147.164163
VUV 138.750077
WST 3.18
XAF 654.981945
XAG 0.031899
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.129111
XDR 0.819944
XOF 654.990418
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.7598
ZAR 20.573137
ZMK 10421.921558
ZMW 28.447651
ZWL 372.822835
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

'Leave our marshes alone': Iraqis fear oil drilling would destroy fabled wetlands
'Leave our marshes alone': Iraqis fear oil drilling would destroy fabled wetlands / Photo: Asaad NIAZI - AFP

'Leave our marshes alone': Iraqis fear oil drilling would destroy fabled wetlands

Plans to drill for oil in the protected Mesopotamian Marshes of southern Iraq have galvanised villagers and activists determined to save the mythical wetlands already battered by years of drought.

Text size:

"We will never accept it," marshes activist Murtada al-Janubi told a meeting, seeking to reassure anxious residents gathered in a traditional hall made of woven reeds from the wetlands, to discuss the government's plans for the UNESCO-listed area that is their home.

Everyone nodded in approval.

If they fail to save the Huwaizah Marshes, "a historical era... with its heritage and southern identity will vanish for ever", Janubi, 33, told AFP during a tour of the wetlands that straddle the Iraq-Iran border.

The millennia-old history of the marshes -- the reputed home of the biblical Garden of Eden -- "would end with this oilfield", said the moustached, tanned activist.

In 2023, as China became a major player across various sectors in Iraq, the oil-rich country awarded a Chinese firm the rights to explore the Huwaizah field.

Several residents of Abu Khsaf, the village in Missan province where the meeting with activist Janubi was held, said that at the time they did not fully grasp the implications.

Only this year, when heavy machinery was brought in to conduct seismic studies and open a new road, did the residents say they recognised a "threat" to the swamplands that have sustained their traditional way of life.

The government says that the oil and environment ministries are collaborating closely to avoid endangering the wetlands, and that any activity would occur near, not inside, the marshes.

Satellite images of the area from March, which AFP obtained from Planet Labs, show tracks left by heavy vehicles.

Wim Zwijnenburg of Dutch peace organisation PAX said the images point to the "rapid" construction of "a 1.3-kilometre-long dirt road in the vegetation of the marshes".

- 'All we want is water' -

Missan province already has several oilfields, including one just kilometres (miles) from the marshes.

Its emissions fill the sky with heavy grey smoke, and its gas flares can be seen from the fishing boats that roam the depleted marshes, suffering after years of harsh drought and dwindling water supplies.

Nestled between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, the Mesopotamian Marshes depend on rivers and tributaries originating in neighbouring Turkey and Iran.

Sparse rainfall and reduced water flows blamed on climate change, upstream dams and government rationing have created shortages with severe impacts on the marsh ecosystem.

Residents expect the marshes to dry up in summer, hoping for a long-absent good rainy season to revive them.

The current water level in many areas is less than a metre (three feet) deep. Um al-Naaj lake, once teeming with fish, is now just three metres deep, compared with at least six before the drought.

Rowing his boat on the lake, fisherman Kazem Ali, 80, said that while the new project may create some jobs, "we, the average people, will not benefit".

"All we want is water," he said.

Rasul al-Ghurabi, a 28-year-old buffalo farmer, said he would never quit "the marshes and the freedom that comes with them" even if the oil company offered him a job.

- Protected core -

One cool March morning, as he led his buffaloes to the marshes to graze, Ghurabi was surprised to see workers laying cables and drilling holes.

A cable caused one of his animals to stumble, he said.

The marshes contain a core area that serves as a habitat for numerous species, including migratory waterbirds, surrounded by a buffer zone for protection.

Activists have accused authorities of conducting seismic studies within the core, which the state-owned Missan Oil Company denies, saying that the vehicles spotted in the area were carrying out work for a separate field nearby and had since left.

The Huwaizah oilfield was discovered in the 1970s, and Iraq shares it with Iran, which has been extracting oil for a long time.

The Missan Oil Company says that 300 square kilometres (116 square miles) of the field's area overlap with the marshes' buffer zone, but that the oilfield does not encroach on the core.

An environmental impact assessment concluded in 2024 would provide "the baseline for work in the field", the company said, adding that exploration would take place "without harming the natural habitat".

According to environment ministry official Jassem Falahi, the protected status of the marshes does not bar development projects.

"But investment is subject to specific conditions and standards that must not disturb the core area... or affect the site and its biodiversity," he told AFP.

- Balance -

Iraqi activist Ahmed Saleh Neema, a vocal advocate for the protection of the marshes, expressed concerns that oil companies might not adhere to regulations and further drain the marshes.

A UNESCO spokesperson told AFP that "concerns have been raised in recent years" over the potential impact of oil-related activities on the marshes.

Across the border in Iran, local media have long warned against the environmental impact of oil projects.

In a report earlier this year, two decades into oil activities in the wetlands known in Iran as Hoor al-Azim, the Tasnim news agency said energy companies had obstructed water flows and drained areas to build infrastructure.

Tasnim also said that oilfields have polluted water resources.

Environmental activist Neema said authorities should strike "a balance between two great resources: the oil and the marshes".

Iraq is one of the world's largest oil producers, and crude sales account for 90 percent of state revenues.

But while oil is financially vital, the marshes represent the livelihood of its people and "the heritage, the folklore, and the reputation of Iraq", Neema said.

Back in the village of Abu Khsaf, Janubi said: "Our region is already teeming with oilfields. Isn't that enough?"

"Leave our marshes alone."

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)