NY Times, Dec. 18 2015
Scarred Riverbeds and Dead Pistachio Trees in a Parched Iran
By THOMAS ERDBRINK

POUZE KHOON, Iran — The early-morning sun meagerly brightened the gloom 
of this sad township, a collection of empty, crumbling houses along a 
highway through the dusty desert landscape in southeastern Iran.

Until a decade or so ago, Amin Shoul would come here every year to help 
his father harvest pistachios, the nuts that are as much a symbol of 
Iran as caviar. Now, with the last reserves of groundwater tapped out, 
the family’s grove and the seemingly endless fields beyond it are filled 
with dead trees, their bone-colored branches a deathly contrast to the 
turquoise sky.

Mr. Shoul, 32, a journalist, said he and his family had moved away years 
ago, leaving the house to squatters, unemployed laborers living off 
meager government stipends — and even they had started to leave. “I 
don’t see how we can ever return to the past,” he remarked, 
matter-of-factly.

As Iran emerges from isolation after signing a nuclear agreement with 
the West, attention has focused on its business relations, particularly 
in the oil and airline industries. But Iran needs expertise in a number 
of areas, including the environment. Most pressing in that regard is its 
impending water crisis.

Iran is in the grip of a seven-year drought that shows no sign of 
breaking and that, many experts believe, may be the new normal. Even a 
return to past rainfall levels might not be enough to head off a 
nationwide water crisis, since the country has already consumed 70 
percent of its groundwater supplies over the past 50 years.

Always arid, Iran is facing desertification as lakes and rivers dry up 
and once-fertile plains become barren. According to the United Nations, 
Iran is home to four of the 10 most polluted cities in the world, with 
dust and desertification among the leading causes.

In Zanjan, in central Iran, the historic Mir Baha-eddin Bridge crosses a 
riverbed of sand, stones and weeds. In Gomishan, on the shores of the 
Caspian Sea, the fishermen who once built houses on poles surrounded by 
freshwater now have to drive for miles to reach the receding shoreline. 
In Urmia, close to the Turkish border, residents have held protests to 
demand that the government return water to a once-huge lake that is now 
the source only of dust storms.

More than 15 percent of the approximately 150,000 acres of pistachio 
trees in the main producing area in Kerman Province have died in the 
last decade or so.

A nationwide network of dams, often heralded by state television as a 
sign of progress and water management, is adding to water shortages in 
many places while helping deplete groundwater. In Isfahan, the 
once-iconic Zayanderud River is now a dusty scar the size of the Seine 
snaking through the city, because officials were forced to divert its 
water to the desert city of Yazd.

In Tehran, officials barely managed to keep the water running this 
summer as reservoirs shrank to dangerously low levels. Subsidies for 
water and electricity encourage overconsumption in urban areas. Isa 
Kalantari, a former minister of agriculture, warns that more than half 
of Iran’s provinces could become uninhabitable within 15 years, 
displacing millions of people.

As in drought-stricken California, agriculture accounts for about 90 
percent of water consumption in Iran. And here, matters are not helped 
by the prevalence of crude, centuries-old irrigation methods and other 
wasteful practices.

Where there are no longer rivers and lakes to be tapped, desperate 
farmers and municipalities are turning to dwindling groundwater 
supplies. Drillers report that they are increasingly coming up dry, even 
at depths of more than 600 feet. When they do find water, they say, it 
is often polluted with heavy metals and arsenic, released as the drill 
bits break through sediment.

The changing landscape is all too visible in Kerman Province. In a 
not-so-distant past, the area was a beltway of green stretching for 
hundreds of square miles, using groundwater to produce grain and 
pistachios. Now, the sun bakes treeless plains that are increasingly 
giving way to deserts. During storms, the dead trees lose their 
branches, turning them into stumps, while the dust swirls about in 
ever-growing quantities.

In the dead pistachio grove, a rare rainstorm recently left white lines 
in the red soil.

“Salt and other things,” Mr. Shoul said — residue from the contaminated 
water brought up by wells that sucked the last remaining groundwater 
years ago. He said he had kidney stones, as do many others in the 
region: a result, he said, of their drinking water from the taps.

“The irony,” he said, “is that I have to drink even more water to reduce 
the pain.”

Just over 50 miles north, in the city of Sirjan, decisions long 
postponed have begun to impose themselves on local officials, forcing 
them to make difficult choices in allocating scarce water supplies.

Wedged between two newly built neighborhoods of five-story apartment 
buildings, a convoy of water trucks waited in line to fill their 
5,000-gallon tanks. Under a deal with the local water management 
company, up to 400 of these trucks a day draw water from the city’s main 
well and head to the Golgohar iron mine, the largest such mine in the 
Middle East. It employs over 7,000 people, many of them from Sirjan, and 
a water shortage has compounded an already difficult situation brought 
on by collapsing iron ore prices.

“It is internationally unprecedented to carry water with tankers, but we 
have no other way,” Naser Taghizadeh, chief executive of the Golgohar 
Iron Ore Company, told the local Negarestan news outlet. “If water is 
not taken to the complex, projects are stopped, and many people will 
lose their jobs.”

Residents have objected and even staged a sit-in, but the tankers keep 
coming for the water, kicking up clouds of fine dust as they drive off. 
The drivers, often from the city, say they are scorned by their 
neighbors. “We need to feed our families too,” one of them, Saaed 
Salimizadeh, said. “When the water runs out, it will run out for all of 
us. We have to choose between jobs and drinking water.”

Sirjan is by no means alone in its water shortages. In surrounding 
Kerman Province, 1,455 of 2,064 village reservoirs have dropped below 
levels needed to sustain the population, according to the local water 
management agency. The semiofficial Mehr news agency reported in July, 
citing local statistics, that 541 villages were dependent on tanker 
deliveries for their water.

It is not just water levels that are declining. “The quality of the 
water has decreased dramatically, as have the levels of the underground 
water,” Akbar Mahmoud Abadi, a deputy at the local department of the 
Ministry of Agricultural Jihad in Sirjan, said in a written reply to 
questions. “The condition is very worrisome.”

Kerman Province remains one of the largest producers of pistachios in 
the world, but its irrigation methods are frequently outdated. In one 
field, a farmer, Ismael Alizadeh, opened an eight-inch water pipe during 
the middle of the day, under the burning sun, flooding a field of 
pistachio trees. “We have always done it like this,” he said with a shrug.

Soheil Sharif, a major producer in the area, said other farmers had 
ridiculed him when he installed a $600,000 drip irrigation system in his 
90-acre pistachio grove a few years ago. But now his farm is green, 
while others around it have dried up.

He blamed the government for keeping energy and water prices low, saying 
that he paid only $270 a month for his electricity bill, covering his 
huge pump and 20 employees. “It’s ridiculous,” he said. “And while we 
have no water, its price is also dirt cheap.”

His investment has paid off, Mr. Sharif, 44, acknowledged. “I have 
bought myself another 15 years,” he said as he walked among freshly 
picked pistachio trees. That is just enough to last to his retirement.

“After that,” he said, “this place, like everything else here, is done for.”
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