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Turkey, Iraq and Syria to Form Collaborative Water Institute
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Also in PEEK
Washington Post Editorial Board Peddles 'U.S. Knows Best' Position on Iraq
Steve Benen The Carpetbagger Report
Looking Back: Rumsfeld Praised Mass Murderers Over PM Maliki
Jonathan Schwarz A Tiny Revolution
Mukasey Asks Congress to Legitimize the "War on Terror"
Digby Hullabaloo
The Middle East is an area rich in oil reserves but without ample water supplies to sustain a growing populace.
Over 21 politically distinct countries and jurisdictions maintain 5% of the world's total inhabitants with less than 1% of the world's water reserves. At times, coming to an agreement on how to share the three river systems (the Jordan, Nile, and Tigris-Euphrates) that traverse the region make water policy a virtual nightmare.
Now three countries are coming forward to resolve past arguments on transboundary water issues. Turkey, Iraq, and Syria will soon form an institute to study water in the Middle East, as detailed in The Zaman (a major Turkish newspaper).
Experts, scholars, and professionals from each country will begin meetings at Turkey's Atatürk Dam to share information and work on resolving past water-allocation problems.
Goals of the institute include:
Management of water storage and dams in the region will be an aspect of the institute's endeavors. Turkey and Syria will attempt joint construction of a dam on the Asi River.
Syria expressed an interest in greater downstream shares from dams on the Euphrates River. Iraq, which had previously filed concerns against Turkey's dams on the Tigris and Euphrates, approved the construction on the controversial Ilisu Dam on the Tigris River. Also, see this post on Intercontinental Cry on the contested Ilisu Dam and related protests in Turkey!
Tagged as: nile, middle east, drought, water
| Also in PEEK | |||
| Washington Post Editorial Board Peddles 'U.S. Knows Best' Position on Iraq The Washington Post still doesn't believe Maliki, Iraqi officials. Post by Steve Benen. July 23, 2008. |
Looking Back: Rumsfeld Praised Mass Murderers Over PM Maliki Apparently the Bush Administration not liking Maliki isn't a new thing. Post by Jonathan Schwarz. July 23, 2008. |
Mukasey Asks Congress to Legitimize the "War on Terror" "This is nothing but a transparent attempt to get bipartisan buy in, before the election, to the Global War on Terror." Post by Digby. July 23, 2008. |
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