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Sprinklers and drip irrigation help Iraqis beat drought

A farmer adjusts a sprinkler, part of a new water management systems brought by the UN World Food Programme, on his farm in the village of Al-Azrakiya, in Iraq's central province of Anbar, on February 22, 2024. (AFP)
A farmer adjusts a sprinkler, part of a new water management systems brought by the UN World Food Programme, on his farm in the village of Al-Azrakiya, in Iraq's central province of Anbar, on February 22, 2024. (AFP)
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25 Mar 2024 07:03:23 GMT9
25 Mar 2024 07:03:23 GMT9
  • UN World Food Programme introduced new water management systems to hundreds of farmers in the country

AL-AZRAKIYA, Iraq: After four years of drought, Iraqi farmer Mohammed Sami was about to abandon his father’s parched land, but then a water-saving irrigation system revived his crops and his hopes.

He is among hundreds of farmers in the country battered by heat waves, scarce rain and depleted rivers to benefit from new water management systems brought by the UN World Food Programme.

The systems use automated sprinklers and drip irrigation to ensure scarce water is used in the most efficient way and is not lost as run-off or evaporated under the blazing sun.

“Since 2019, due to the water scarcity, we have been unable to farm the land,” said 38-year-old Sami in his village of Al-Azrakiya in the central province of Anbar.

Crushed by the drought that was turning his 10 dunums, or about one hectare, of land into desert, Sami started working in a nearby city as a day laborer several years ago.

“I thought about giving up farming for good,” he said.

But then, two years ago, Sami’s prospects changed, and his land has flourished again.

The WFP helped with a new automated irrigation system that waters his field for just two hours per day, two to three days a week.

“I now irrigate 10 donums with the same amount of water that I used for one dunums before,” he said, adding that his wheat harvest had shot up from seven to 12 tonnes per year.

Last year the WFP project helped more than 1,100 farmers “in areas most affected by climate change and drought,” said Khansae Ghazi from the UN agency’s Baghdad office.

The new irrigation systems “use 70 percent less water than traditional methods such as flooding” — the vastly more wasteful method used for millennia.

The modern techniques allow farmers to grow diverse crops year-round, also including barley, cucumber, watermelon and eggplant, and reduce “the reliance on unpredictable rainfall,” the WFP said.

Iraq, still recovering from years of war and chaos, is one of the five countries most impacted by some effects of climate change, according to the UN.

The site of ancient Mesopotamia, where civilizations flourished on the banks of the mighty Tigris and Euphrates rivers, Iraq now endures extreme water scarcity, worsened by upstream river dams in Iran and Turkiye.

“Iraq is the Land of Two Rivers, its more than 7,000-year-old civilization has always relied on farming,” said Agriculture Ministry spokesman Mohammed Al-Khazai.

“For decades, the country was afflicted by floods, not drought.”

But as rainfall has become more irregular and water more scarce, leaving aquifers depleted, many farmers have abandoned their plots in the new dust-bowl regions.

During the 2021-22 season, the farm sector’s productivity plunged by 36 percent from the previous year, said the WFP.

State authorities have restricted water use for agriculture to ensure sufficient drinking water for Iraq’s 43 million people.

AFP

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