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Climate change is turning the cradle of civilization into a grave

  

Category:  Environment/Climate

Via:  hallux  •  3 years ago  •  16 comments

By:   Louisa Loveluck and Mustafa Salim - WaPo

Climate change is turning the cradle of civilization into a grave

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



HADDAM, Iraq

No one lives here anymore. The mud-brick buildings are empty, just husks of the human life that became impossible on this land. Wind whips through bone-dry reeds. For miles, there’s no water to be seen.

Carved from an ancient land once known as Mesopotamia, Iraq is home to the cradle of civilization — the expanse between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers where the first complex human communities emerged.

But as climate change produces extreme warming and water grows scarcer around the Middle East, the land here is drying up. Across Iraq’s south, there is a sense of an ending.

Dozens of farming villages are abandoned, but for an isolated family here and there. The intrusion of saltwater is poisoning lands that have been passed for generations from fathers to sons. The United Nations recently estimated that more than 100 square miles of farmland a year are being lost to desert.

Years of below-average rainfall have left Iraqi farmers more dependent than ever on the dwindling waters of the Tigris and Euphrates. But upstream, Turkey and Iran have dammed their own waterways in the past two years, further weakening the southern flow, so a salty current from the Persian Gulf now pushes northward and into Iraq’s rivers. The salt has reached as far as the northern edge of Basra, some 85 miles inland.

In the historic marshes, meanwhile, men are clinging to what remains of life as they knew it as their buffaloes die and their wives and children scatter across nearby cities, no longer able to stand the summer heat.

Temperatures in Iraq topped a record 125 degrees this summer with aid groups warning that drought was limiting access to food, water and electricity for 12 million people here and in neighboring Syria. With Iraq warming faster than much of the globe, this is a glimpse of the world’s future.

Across marshes often hailed as the original Garden of Eden and on the baking lands beyond, inhabitants now face a choice. “Do we stay or do we go?” sighed Raad al-Ghali, a buffalo herder in the historic marshland of Chibayish while recently sheltering in the shadow beside his tent.

“Everyone is suffering these days. We don’t know what to do.”

In Chibayish’s labyrinth of winding waterways, water levels have dropped. Salt and pollution are killing the reeds. To keep their animals alive, residents fill rickety boats with drinking water purchased miles away.

Nearby fields have turned brown. Orchards and roses have disappeared, and the palm trees are dying slowly. In the border town of Siba, water for irrigation is so salty it is poisoning the harvest.

“We used to grow greenhouses of cucumbers,” recalled a farmer, Abu Ahmed, 52, standing in his desiccated farm. “Now we don’t even have a single cucumber’s worth of fresh water. How can we continue here?”

The impact of rising temperatures started slowly, people recall. Year after year, the summers got hotter. Days on the water felt more difficult, and cases of heat stroke increased, according to residents. Buffaloes fell sick. Fish were found dead on the shore.

In previous summers, Ghali’s animals were tended by his wife and sons, but this year they left for the town of al-Majer, 70 miles to the north. “They were tired of it here. It was too hot for them. Sometimes we feel like we’re the last generation who will do this. We feel like it’s the end of an era.”

Ghali’s hair had grayed at his temples, framing wrinkles deepened by the sun. The 40-year-old looked exhausted.

Could he sell the animals and move, too? He shook his head. “No one would buy them now.”

He looked out across the mud flats where his black buffaloes stood sweating.

“We never thought things would reach this point,” he said.

Iraq’s average temperature has risen by 4.1 degrees Fahrenheit since the end of the 19th century, according to Berkeley Earth, double the speed of the Earth as a whole. Climate scientists warn that the extreme temperatures facing places like southern Iraq are a small taste of what will follow elsewhere.

Iraq’s climate woes have exacerbated shortages in everything from food to electricity generation. Fisheries have been depleted. In the country’s north, wheat production is expected to decline by 70 percent, aid groups say. In provinces without access to rivers, families are spending ever larger portions of their monthly income on drinking water.

The result, increasingly, is migration. According to the International Organization of Migration, more than 20,000 Iraqis were displaced by lack of access to clean water in 2019, most of them in the country’s south.

But as they flee to towns and cities, they’re further straining services already hollowed out by widespread corruption and weak job markets where unemployment is high.

Researchers say migration has sparked tensions with longtime residents, who blame the newcomers for shortages of water and electricity. Summer blackouts are already frequent.

And politicians use migration to deflect from their own failures. “There’s now a narrative that says people who are emigrated to the cities and living in unofficial neighborhoods are overburdening the local water and power supplies,” said Maha Yassin, a researcher at the Clingendael Institute’s Planetary Security Initiative.

In Majer, a run-down town where the summer heat forces residents indoors for much of the day, Ghali’s brothers described the new life they had found there. The lights flickered, and a weak fan whirred.

“I’m just sitting here. There’s no work,” said Tahseen Mohamed, 25, dressed in a dark galabeya with his black hair brushed neatly upward.

The house was packed with relatives, all dependent on an uncle who earned a salary serving with a militia in the country’s north. Another brother, they said, was trying to sell the family’s buffalo milk but with little luck. “The salt made their milk fattier,” he said.

All agreed that life was more tolerable in the city. The children were happier; the houses had fans. But anxiety still abounded. Ghali, they said, had been taken to the hospital days earlier with heatstroke. An infant niece had died in the hot car when they tried to take her to the doctor. “The heat makes life so difficult. We know this only gets worse,” said Hussein Mohsen, 24.

Mohamed said that his wife had left him once they moved to Majer, because he couldn’t afford a house. “Look, I want to make it happen, but where does the money come from?” the young man asked.

In the corner of the room, an old woman nodded sympathetically. “We’re not ourselves here,” she said.

Some villagers can’t even afford to flee the tendrils of climate change. In the pockets of Iraq’s rural south that have largely emptied of people, some families fret they have been left behind.

As night fell in the remote border town of Faw on a recent day, Jamila Mohamed, 55, and her brother Hussein were worrying about their animals.

The family was squatting in a government building, because they could not afford to pay rent, and relying on their livestock for food. But the rising heat and salty water have made the land they live on almost useless. Several cows have died. Others are rail thin.

“We need to sell them because we can’t feed them,” Hussein said, patting a black and white calf on the head. “But what happens after that? We can’t afford to leave this place.”

Standing in the twilight as the cows grazed on dirty hay, the air felt still and silent.

Crossing her arms, Jamila exhaled sadly.

“Almost everyone left us,” she said. “We only have God now.”


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Hallux
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Hallux    3 years ago

As we all know, the only climatologists we should listen to are those funded by the drill-baby-drill industry. On his 2nd. coming Jesus may just have to go to Haddam instead of Jefferson County.  /S

 
 
 
Greg Jones
Professor Participates
1.1  Greg Jones  replied to  Hallux @1    3 years ago

Gee, I thought it was all those climate experts on Internet forums.

Droughts are not necessarily an indicator climate change.

 
 
 
Hallux
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  Hallux  replied to  Greg Jones @1.1    3 years ago

Perhaps not, but both are an indicator of mass migration to come, y'all ain't seen nothing yet on your borders.

 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
1.1.2  Ronin2  replied to  Hallux @1.1.1    3 years ago

Canada has far more room and natural resources than we do. Have fun when we start herding them all north.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
2  Trout Giggles    3 years ago
Years of below-average rainfall have left Iraqi farmers more dependent than ever on the dwindling waters of the Tigris and Euphrates. But upstream, Turkey and Iran have dammed their own waterways in the past two years, further weakening the southern flow, so a salty current from the Persian Gulf now pushes northward and into Iraq’s rivers. The salt has reached as far as the northern edge of Basra, some 85 miles inland.

I've heard talk of the coming Water Wars. This is where it will start.

 
 
 
Colour Me Free
Senior Quiet
3  Colour Me Free    3 years ago
The house was packed with relatives, all dependent on an uncle who earned a salary serving with a militia in the country’s north. Another brother, they said, was trying to sell the family’s buffalo milk but with little luck. “The salt made their milk fattier,” he said.

All agreed that life was more tolerable in the city. The children were happier; the houses had fans. But anxiety still abounded. Ghali, they said, had been taken to the hospital days earlier with heatstroke. An infant niece had died in the hot car when they tried to take her to the doctor. “The heat makes life so difficult. We know this only gets worse,” said Hussein Mohsen, 24.

Mohamed said that his wife had left him once they moved to Majer, because he couldn’t afford a house. “Look, I want to make it happen, but where does the money come from?” the young man asked.

Thanks for the informative article .. it is a real eye opener to what is happening outside of the main stream

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
3.1  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  Colour Me Free @3    3 years ago

Good morning Colour Me. Just another reason why a lot of folks in this country should be thankful for abundant water supplies and the infrastructure to obtain it, even in the desert areas where I live. We have droughts as well, but they are nowhere near as bad as what is happening in the Middle East.

 
 
 
Colour Me Free
Senior Quiet
3.1.1  Colour Me Free  replied to  Ed-NavDoc @3.1    3 years ago

Hello Ed .. so sorry I missed you..

Droughts are devastating, wildfires take advantage of said dryness ... then there are floods [like wildfires] devour / destroy everything in their wake .. I have often wondered why flood water cannot be diverted from a flooding area to a drought area .. yeah I dream of saving trees, farm land .. etc etc

Peace kind sir ... : )

 
 
 
Moose Knuckle
Freshman Quiet
4  Moose Knuckle    3 years ago

Climate change is real. What strikes me the most is what is happening to our primate populations. Scientists say they are evolving and entering the same period man was during the stone age. They are making tools and using them as humans once did, they are expected to create fire soon and then machinery. We could be looking at an apocalyptic planet of the apes scenario sooner than later in the next few hundred years.

You might  be walking down the street and the plotting monkeys jump out and one attaches to your neck as it bites your face all because of climate change. We did it, we forced the Monkeys to get to work and start working on ac systems because of the global warming.

God forgive us!

 
 
 
Duck Hawk
Freshman Silent
5  Duck Hawk    3 years ago

In the M.E. and Coastal Africa they're having the same problems. UNC in NC is doing a study of the North Carolina piedmont and the loss of farmland to saltwater. So we may have these issues here also. 

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
6  Split Personality    3 years ago

Interrupt the flow of any river and there are consequences.  Happens to the Mississippi every time we eff with it

but it can occur naturally like the last few hurricanes that hit the Delta and reversed the flow temporarily,

just long enough to kill thousands of trees.

 
 
 
Trout Giggles
Professor Principal
6.1  Trout Giggles  replied to  Split Personality @6    3 years ago

Just wait until that big earthquake happens on the New Madrid Faultline. There was one approx 200-250 years ago and reversed the flow of the Mississippi River

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
6.2  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  Split Personality @6    3 years ago

I'm curious to see if and when this will happen with the Colorado River.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
6.2.1  Split Personality  replied to  Ed-NavDoc @6.2    3 years ago

Completely possible with all of the water "rights" agreements upstream.

We are guilty of thinking the rivers are like oceans.

Not

 
 
 
Ed-NavDoc
Professor Quiet
6.2.2  Ed-NavDoc  replied to  Split Personality @6.2.1    3 years ago

Imagine the effects to California and it's economy if the course of the Colorado River were diverted further East towards the interior of Arizona rather than the CA/AZ border. Could be catastrophic for California.

 
 
 
Split Personality
Professor Guide
6.2.3  Split Personality  replied to  Ed-NavDoc @6.2.2    3 years ago

They would be forced to build more desalinization plants.

Easier to capture all the weather related run off from snow and rain.

all of those endless deep runoff channels used more for movie chases.

A third of the run off ends up in the ocean.

It would definitely impact the economy by creating more jobs and raising water prices.

Catch it and pump it back to the reservoirs if possible

or create new reservoirs, boat owners will love it.

 
 

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