Berliner Boersenzeitung - Overuse and climate change kill off Iraq's Sawa Lake

EUR -
AED 4.1934
AFN 79.917559
ALL 94.07638
AMD 438.133103
ANG 2.04325
AOA 1046.924825
ARS 1353.051756
AUD 1.759165
AWG 2.05646
AZN 1.93516
BAM 1.960884
BBD 2.304153
BDT 139.452762
BGN 1.956443
BHD 0.430449
BIF 3397.166883
BMD 1.141685
BND 1.472003
BOB 7.885374
BRL 6.434993
BSD 1.141449
BTN 97.9952
BWP 15.32901
BYN 3.73465
BYR 22377.023858
BZD 2.292323
CAD 1.561345
CDF 3270.927419
CHF 0.934699
CLF 0.027879
CLP 1069.850009
CNY 8.225037
CNH 8.187981
COP 4690.80646
CRC 580.399639
CUC 1.141685
CUP 30.25465
CVE 110.552098
CZK 24.821938
DJF 202.900171
DKK 7.459118
DOP 67.383811
DZD 150.226309
EGP 56.699843
ERN 17.125273
ETB 153.156693
FJD 2.566793
FKP 0.844436
GBP 0.841935
GEL 3.127792
GGP 0.844436
GHS 11.699229
GIP 0.844436
GMD 82.201662
GNF 9890.728977
GTQ 8.769813
GYD 238.748972
HKD 8.956038
HNL 29.683333
HRK 7.531807
HTG 149.295751
HUF 403.368223
IDR 18606.552422
ILS 3.97811
IMP 0.844436
INR 98.087915
IQD 1495.607207
IRR 48093.475871
ISK 144.617313
JEP 0.844436
JMD 182.031929
JOD 0.809488
JPY 162.950969
KES 147.853125
KGS 99.840454
KHR 4589.573574
KMF 492.066082
KPW 1027.476979
KRW 1555.020881
KWD 0.349721
KYD 0.950982
KZT 582.424872
LAK 24660.393643
LBP 102294.965638
LKR 341.555504
LRD 226.796034
LSL 20.780828
LTL 3.371099
LVL 0.690594
LYD 6.226142
MAD 10.499914
MDL 19.697412
MGA 5160.41589
MKD 61.503446
MMK 2397.027381
MNT 4082.240327
MOP 9.224056
MRU 45.202587
MUR 52.281315
MVR 17.650896
MWK 1980.823213
MXN 21.918109
MYR 4.848758
MZN 73.078953
NAD 20.780661
NGN 1804.010535
NIO 42.01823
NOK 11.539928
NPR 156.793497
NZD 1.893319
OMR 0.438986
PAB 1.141149
PEN 4.174567
PGK 4.703167
PHP 63.644356
PKR 321.956392
PLN 4.277893
PYG 9118.680695
QAR 4.160805
RON 5.049215
RSD 117.228985
RUB 90.487954
RWF 1614.714537
SAR 4.281931
SBD 9.526149
SCR 16.231312
SDG 685.578387
SEK 10.947548
SGD 1.46878
SHP 0.897185
SLE 25.939134
SLL 23940.561559
SOS 652.470267
SRD 42.299562
STD 23630.572185
SVC 9.984974
SYP 14844.02504
SZL 20.719959
THB 37.264115
TJS 11.297789
TMT 3.995897
TND 3.40222
TOP 2.673939
TRY 44.831458
TTD 7.733983
TWD 34.200997
TZS 3063.373453
UAH 47.305743
UGX 4155.737614
USD 1.141685
UYU 47.583781
UZS 14664.942874
VES 108.284845
VND 29779.708689
VUV 137.66353
WST 3.139074
XAF 657.667806
XAG 0.033087
XAU 0.000339
XCD 3.085461
XDR 0.818345
XOF 655.326981
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.399482
ZAR 20.367213
ZMK 10276.539564
ZMW 29.471148
ZWL 367.622069
  • CMSC

    0.0899

    22.2

    +0.4%

  • BCC

    -0.0050

    87.54

    -0.01%

  • CMSD

    0.0587

    22.21

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    0.0100

    21.96

    +0.05%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    71.05

    -0.38%

  • GSK

    0.3300

    40.8

    +0.81%

  • RIO

    -0.3000

    58.55

    -0.51%

  • AZN

    1.1800

    73

    +1.62%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5000

    67.5

    -2.22%

  • SCS

    -0.1600

    10.37

    -1.54%

  • BTI

    -0.1750

    46.17

    -0.38%

  • JRI

    -0.0400

    12.94

    -0.31%

  • RELX

    0.2950

    54.36

    +0.54%

  • BP

    -0.6350

    28.92

    -2.2%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    10.26

    -0.44%

  • RYCEF

    0.1150

    12.15

    +0.95%

Overuse and climate change kill off Iraq's Sawa Lake
Overuse and climate change kill off Iraq's Sawa Lake / Photo: Asaad NIAZI - AFP

Overuse and climate change kill off Iraq's Sawa Lake

A "No Fishing" sign on the edge of Iraq's western desert is one of the few clues that this was once Sawa Lake, a biodiverse wetland and recreational landmark.

Text size:

Human activity and climate change have combined to turn the site into a barren wasteland with piles of salt.

Abandoned hotels and tourist facilities here hark back to the 1990s when the salt lake, circled by sandy banks, was in its heyday and popular with newly-weds and families who came to swim and picnic.

But today, the lake near the city of Samawa, south of the capital Baghdad, is completely dry.

Bottles litter its former banks and plastic bags dangle from sun-scorched shrubs, while two pontoons have been reduced to rust.

"This year, for the first time, the lake has disappeared," environmental activist Husam Subhi said. "In previous years, the water area had decreased during the dry seasons."

Today, on the sandy ground sprinkled with salt, only a pond remains where tiny fish swim, in a source that connects the lake to an underground water table.

The five-square-kilometre (two-square-mile) lake has been drying up since 2014, says Youssef Jabbar, environmental department head of Muthana province.

The causes have been "climate change and rising temperatures," he explained.

"Muthana is a desert province, it suffers from drought and lack of rainfall."

- 1,000 illegal wells -

A government statement issued last week also pointed to "more than 1,000 wells illegally dug" for agriculture in the area.

Additionally, nearby cement and salt factories have "drained significant amounts of water from the groundwater that feeds the lake", Jabbar said.

It would take nothing short of a miracle to bring Sawa Lake back to life.

Use of aquifers would have to be curbed and, following three years of drought, the area would now need several seasons of abundant rainfall, in a country hit by desertification and regarded as one of the five most vulnerable to climate change.

The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands, a global treaty, recognised Sawa as "unique... because it is a closed water body in an area of sabkha (salt flat) with no inlet or outlet.

"The lake is formed over limestone rock and is isolated by gypsum barriers surrounding the lake; its water chemistry is unique," says the convention's website.

A stopover for migratory birds, the lake was once "home to several globally vulnerable species" such as the eastern imperial eagle, houbara bustard and marbled duck.

- 'Lake died before me' -

Sawa is not the only body of water in Iraq facing the perils of drought.

Iraqi social media is often filled with photos of grotesquely cracked soil, such as in the UNESCO-listed Howeiza marshes in the south, or Razzaza Lake in the central province of Karbala.

In Sawa, a sharp drop in rainfall -- now only 30 percent of what used to be normal for the region -- has lowered the underground water table, itself drained by wells, said Aoun Dhiab, a senior advisor at Iraq's water resources ministry.

And rising temperatures have increased evaporation.

Dhiab said authorities have banned the digging of new wells and are working to close illegally-dug wells across the country.

Latif Dibes, who divides his time between his hometown of Samawa and his adopted country of Sweden, has worked for the past decade to raise environmental awareness.

The former driving school instructor cleans up the banks of the Euphrates River and has turned the vast, lush garden of his home into a public park.

He remembers the school trips and holidays of his childhood, when the family would go swimming at Sawa.

"If the authorities had taken an interest, the lake would not have disappeared at this rate. It's unbelievable," he said.

"I am 60 years old and I grew up with the lake. I thought I would disappear before it, but unfortunately, it has died before me."

(H.Schneide--BBZ)