Home WebMail
| Calgary -1.1°C
Regions Advertise Login Contact
Action News Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Canada
  • US
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Ireland tightens immigration rules to check population growth
  • Deadly floods swamp homes in Thailand as residents wait for aid
  • Trump administration nixes temporary immigration protections for Haitians
  • Aftermath of Homs killings may mark turning point for Syria’s government
  • US group sues Apple over DR Congo conflict minerals
  • China blocks ByteDance from Nvidia chip use: Report
  • Five key takeaways from the UK’s tax-and-spending budget
  • Massive fire rips through Hong Kong high-rise complex, killing several
  • LIVE: Arsenal vs Bayern Munich – UEFA Champions League
  • Georgia judge drops election interference case against Trump
  • US ranchers whiplashed by Trump’s beef policies
  • Pope Leo to travel to Turkiye, Lebanon on first foreign trip
  • How Ukraine gamifies war
  • UK unveils significant tax rises in budget after ‘shambolic’ forecast leak
  • Guinea-Bissau army officers say they have seized power; president deposed
  • Was South Africa’s G20 success real change or a symbolic win?
  • What’s the legacy of the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation?
  • Russia-Ukraine ‘peace plan’: What’s the latest version after US-Kyiv talks?
  • Death toll in fire at Hong Kong high-rise residential buildings rises to 36
  • India-China in new spat over Arunachal Pradesh: What’s it all about?
  • Europe reimagines rearmament at sea, learning from Russia’s war on Ukraine
  • Palestine Action’s legal challenge against UK government ban begins
  • Video: Somalia drought threatens mass starvation as aid slows down
  • Israel’s systematic campaign to expel West Bank Palestinians
  • Major fire puts Hong Kong on highest alert as firefighters tackle blaze
  • Ireland tightens immigration rules to check population growth
  • Deadly floods swamp homes in Thailand as residents wait for aid
  • Trump administration nixes temporary immigration protections for Haitians
  • Aftermath of Homs killings may mark turning point for Syria’s government
  • US group sues Apple over DR Congo conflict minerals
  • China blocks ByteDance from Nvidia chip use: Report
  • Five key takeaways from the UK’s tax-and-spending budget
  • Massive fire rips through Hong Kong high-rise complex, killing several
  • LIVE: Arsenal vs Bayern Munich – UEFA Champions League
  • Georgia judge drops election interference case against Trump
  • US ranchers whiplashed by Trump’s beef policies
  • Pope Leo to travel to Turkiye, Lebanon on first foreign trip
  • How Ukraine gamifies war
  • UK unveils significant tax rises in budget after ‘shambolic’ forecast leak
  • Guinea-Bissau army officers say they have seized power; president deposed
  • Was South Africa’s G20 success real change or a symbolic win?
  • What’s the legacy of the US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation?
  • Russia-Ukraine ‘peace plan’: What’s the latest version after US-Kyiv talks?
  • Death toll in fire at Hong Kong high-rise residential buildings rises to 36
  • India-China in new spat over Arunachal Pradesh: What’s it all about?
  • Europe reimagines rearmament at sea, learning from Russia’s war on Ukraine
  • Palestine Action’s legal challenge against UK government ban begins
  • Video: Somalia drought threatens mass starvation as aid slows down
  • Israel’s systematic campaign to expel West Bank Palestinians
  • Major fire puts Hong Kong on highest alert as firefighters tackle blaze
Photos: Iraq’s mighty Tigris river is drying up

Photos: Iraq’s mighty Tigris river is drying up

Drying riverbeds mean Iraqi authorities have had to sharply cut the area of cultivated land in the country.

By Al Jazeera Published 2022-09-21 04:37 Updated 2022-09-21 04:37 4 min read Source: Al Jazeera
Explained Human Rights Science & Technology Environment

It was the river that is said to have watered the biblical Garden of Eden and helped give birth to civilisation itself.

But today the Tigris is dying.

Human activity and climate change have choked its once mighty flow through Iraq, where, with its twin river the Euphrates, it made Mesopotamia a cradle of civilisation thousands of years ago.

Iraq may be oil rich but the country is plagued by poverty after decades of war and by droughts and desertification.

Battered by one natural disaster after another, it is one of the five countries most exposed to climate change, according to the United Nations.

From April onwards, temperatures exceed 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) and intense sandstorms often turn the sky orange, covering the country in a film of dust.

Hellish summers see the mercury top a blistering 50 degrees Celsius, near the limit of human endurance, with frequent power cuts shutting down air conditioning for millions.

The Tigris, the lifeline connecting the storied cities of Mosul, Baghdad and Basra, has been choked by dams, most of them upstream in Turkey, and falling rainfall.

The Tigris’s course through Iraq begins in the mountains of northern Iraq’s Kurdish region, near the borders of Turkey and Syria, where local people raise sheep and grow potatoes.

Iraq’s government and Kurdish farmers accuse Turkey, where the Tigris has its source, of withholding water in its dams, dramatically reducing the flow into Iraq.

According to Iraqi official statistics, the level of the Tigris entering Iraq has dropped to just 35 percent of its average over the past century.

Baghdad regularly asks Ankara to release more water.

But Turkey’s ambassador to Iraq, Ali Riza Guney, urged Iraq to “use the available water more efficiently”, tweeting in July that “water is largely wasted in Iraq”.

All that is left of the river Diyala, a tributary that meets the Tigris near the capital, Baghdad, in the central plains, are puddles of stagnant water dotting its parched bed.

Drought has dried up the watercourse that is crucial to the region’s agriculture.

This year authorities have been forced to reduce Iraq’s cultivated areas by half, meaning no crops will be grown in the badly-hit Diyala governorate.

The World Bank warned last year that much of Iraq is likely to face a similar fate.

“By 2050 a temperature increase of one degree Celsius and a precipitation decrease of 10 percent would cause a 20 percent reduction of available freshwater,” it said.

The International Organization for Migration said last month that “climate factors” had displaced more than 3,300 families in Iraq’s central and southern areas in the first three months of this year.

This summer in Baghdad, the level of the Tigris dropped so low that people played volleyball in the middle of the river, splashing barely waist-deep through its waters.

Iraq’s Ministry of Water Resources blames silt because of the river’s reduced flow, with sand and soil once washed downstream now settling to form sandbanks.

Until recently the Baghdad authorities used heavy machinery to dredge the silt, but with cash tight, work has slowed.

Years of war have destroyed much of Iraq’s water infrastructure, with many cities, factories, farms and even hospitals left to dump their waste straight into the river.

As sewage and rubbish from Greater Baghdad pour into the shrinking Tigris, the pollution creates a concentrated toxic soup that threatens marine life and human health.

Environmental policies have not been a high priority for Iraqi governments struggling with political, security and economic crises.

Ecological awareness also remains low among the general public, said activist Hajer Hadi of the Green Climate group, even if “every Iraqi feels climate change through rising temperatures, lower rainfall, falling water levels and dust storms,” she said.

But another threat is affecting the Shatt al-Arab: salt water from the Gulf is pushing ever further upstream as the river flow declines.

The United Nations and local farmers say rising salination is already hitting farm yields, in a trend set to worsen as global warming raises sea levels.

Last month local authorities reported that salt levels in the river north of Basra reached 6,800 parts per million, nearly seven times that of fresh water.

Share this page

  • 𝕏 X/Twitter
  • 🔗 LinkedIn
  • 📘 Facebook
  • 💬 WhatsApp
  • ✉️ Email
Action News logo

Action News

A division of WestNet Continental Broadcasting

About

Part of WestNet N.A.

Action.News

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Action News Code of Ethics

Connect

  • Facebook.com/ActionNews
  • YouTube.com/@actionnew
  • Twitch.com/ActionNews
  • Contact the Newsroom

© 2025 Action News™. All Rights Reserved.

Action News is a trademark of WestNet Continental Broadcasting. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

🔴 LIVE
Action News Live ✖
🔊 Click to unmute