
Shafaq News- Baghdad
After years described as the most severe drought in more
than 90 years, the Euphrates River has once again taken center stage in Iraq
and Syria.
This time, however, it is not as a source of chronic water
scarcity, but as an unprecedented surge of water that swept across large parts
of its basin in eastern Syria before beginning its journey south toward Iraqi
territory, triggering debate between warnings of potential risks and talk of a
rare water opportunity.
According to Ali Al-Hamad, Director of Public Relations at
Syria’s Ministry of Local Administration and Environment, emergency teams faced
“unprecedented challenges” along more than 200 kilometers of the river’s
course. Speaking to Shafaq News, Al-Hamad said that floodwaters
submerged bridges and key pumping stations, forcing authorities to carry out
urgent evacuations using local warning systems.
He confirmed that around 60 water stations had gone out of
service in the Shamiyah and Jazira regions, while vital bridges in Deir ez-Zor,
including the Al-Mayadeen and Al-Asharah bridges, sustained damage. River ferry
operations were also completely suspended at several locations.
In Iraq, Turhan Al-Mufti, adviser to the Iraqi prime
minister on water affairs, told Shafaq News that the country possesses
“irrigation systems capable of absorbing any volumes arriving through the
Euphrates without causing floods.”
Al-Mufti explained that Haditha Lake has significant unused
storage capacity, while Habbaniyah and Razaza lakes provide additional storage
reserves. Excess water can also be diverted to the Tharthar Depression, and if
those systems reach capacity, water can be directed to the marshlands.
“This year is a wet year, not a flood year,” Al-Mufti said,
stressing that Iraq can absorb “any quantity, regardless of size,” with surplus
water potentially directed toward the marshes to support the ecosystem.
At the same time, Al-Mufti emphasized that Iraq still
requires careful water management, noting that climate change necessitates “a
well-considered use” of resources despite improved water conditions compared
with last year.
Iraq is considered among the five countries most affected by
climate change, according to reports by the United Nations and international
organizations.
International reports warn that Iraq will need more than
$233 billion by 2040 to improve its water and environmental infrastructure, equivalent
to about 6% of its annual GDP, while the country has lost approximately 30% of
its agricultural land over the past three decades due to climate change.
Iraqi water expert Tahseen Al-Moussawi said that water
releases arriving from Syria “have not exceeded 2,000 cubic meters per second,”
adding that the flooding in Deir ez-Zor and Raqqa was also linked to
“encroachments and fragile infrastructure left behind by the war.”
In an interview with Shafaq News, Al-Moussawi said the water
wave would enter Iraq through Al-Qaim and is expected to reach Haditha Dam
within four days. He described the dam as Iraq’s “first line of defense,”
noting that it has a storage capacity exceeding 10 billion cubic meters, while
its current storage does not exceed 2 billion cubic meters.
Al-Moussawi added that Iraq possesses an interconnected
storage network including Habbaniyah, Razaza, Tharthar, and the marshlands,
capable of accommodating “billions of cubic meters.” However, he warned that
water management still suffers from “significant waste and chronic poor
planning.”
According to Al-Moussawi, “Based on estimates by water
experts, Iraq needs 20 billion cubic meters of water, and it is expected that
around 17 billion cubic meters will arrive from Syria in the coming days.” He also questioned the speed at which Turkish reservoirs
have filled, saying it “raises questions about Iraq’s management of the
negotiation file,” and called for the reactivation of agreements that determine
Iraq’s share of Euphrates water.
For his part, Bayez Al-Zarari, a member of the Iraqi
Parliament’s Agriculture, Water and Marshlands Committee, said Iraq is dealing
with the incoming wave “scientifically and carefully,” stressing that Haditha
Dam is prepared to receive the flows without risk.
Al-Zarari explained that the committee had taken measures
including postponing agricultural water allocations until mid-June in order to
increase strategic reserves, noting that the current priority is “storing water
rather than releasing it.” He added that the committee relies on satellite data and
international monitoring systems to track water movement, describing management
of the current wave as an opportunity to enhance water security if utilized
properly.
In press statements on Saturday, Iraq’s Ministry of Water
Resources confirmed that the country “has the full technical capacity to absorb
any increase in releases,” noting that the situation remains under continuous
monitoring and that current indicators “do not call for concern.”
By contrast, previous ministry data showed that Iraq had
been experiencing one of its worst droughts since 1933, with water inflows
dropping to only 27% of previous levels and water reserves declining to around
8% of storage capacity. Climate data indicate that temperatures in northeastern
Syria have risen by around one degree Celsius, while average rainfall has
declined by approximately 18 millimeters per month over recent decades. These
changes have contributed to reductions in Euphrates and Tigris flows to nearly
half their natural levels during drought years.





