Water transfer plan from Sea of Oman to southeastern Iran progresses 23%

January 21, 2024 - 12:56

TEHRAN - The project for transferring water from the Sea of Oman to the southeastern Sistan-Baluchestan province has reached 23 percent physical progress, IRNA reported.

A budget of $400 million was allocated by the government in March 2016 to the project which looked also to transfer water to the eastern provinces of South Khorasan and Khorasan Razavi.

The project, being implemented by the Iranian Mines and Mining Industries Development and Renovation Organization (IMIDRO), aims to boost production, expand industries and agriculture, and provide potable water to residents in arid areas.

Once an efficient permanent solution, water supply schemes are now being considered the main cause of environmental depletion haunting many parts of the country leading to dried-up lakes and rivers, and poor water resources management resulting in excessive water withdrawal is also a major threat to the country’s future.

Another project for transferring water from the Persian Gulf to the southern Fars province is in its pipe-laying phase.

The project, which aims to supply water for drinking, agriculture, and industry in Fars province, started in February 2019.

However, redistribution of water resources is inevitably involved in changes in the ecological environment and endangering nature.

Experts believe that these projects entailing economic and environmental burdens are no solution to droughts, and demand the water transfer projects be dismissed due to the irreparable damages to the environment namely deforestation, wildlife habitat destruction, biodiversity degradation, improper land change use, and contaminated seawater.

Changes are divided into two negative and positive impacts, including water supply in water-deficient areas, facilitating the water cycle, improving meteorological conditions in the recipient basins, mitigating ecological water shortage, repairing the damaged ecological system, and preserving the endangered wild fauna and flora.

The negative impacts include salinization and acidification of the donor basins, damage to the ecological environment of the donor basins, and both sides of the conveying channel system, an increase of water consumption in the recipient basins, and spread of diseases, etc.

Desalination plants in southern Iran are currently providing 600,000 cubic meters of drinkable water for the region’s coastal provinces, and the figure will be increased to one million cubic meters shortly, IRIB reported in August 2021.

EF/MA