In Iran, climate change is becoming a matter of life and death

The Scotsman – By Struan Stevenson – 8th Aug 2023

Prior to the 1979 revolution, Iran’s population, numbering 34 million people at that time, relied on a stable water supply, sourced from millennia-old underground canals and aquifers. The Islamic revolution, hijacked by the mullahs, changed all that. The theocratic regime handed control of the nationalised water industry and over 70 per cent of all other business, industrial and service sectors to the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).

Iran now faces an ecological disaster. As the world experiences what is shaping up to be the hottest summer on record in 2023, warnings about escalating global warming have become even more pressing, but appear to be ignored by Tehran.

The mullahs’ maladministration over four decades has left Iran struggling with deforestation, desertification, water scarcity and countless other examples of environmental degradation. Climate change is exacerbating these environmental issues and turning them into a matter of life and death for the Iranian population, now 85 million strong.

Deprived people living in southern, central and eastern Iran have witnessed the relentless destruction of their water infrastructure by the regime’s institutions, primarily the IRGC. The situation has become so bad that, in Sistan and Baluchistan province, water stress is reaching catastrophic levels and people are being forced to collect rainwater from ditches and crocodile-infested lakes.

Water stress is measured by the available water per cubic meter per person annually. If a country has more than 1,700 cubic meters per person per year, it is considered safe. Below 1,700 cubic meters represents water stress and below 1,000 cubic meters is a water crisis. Iran has been fluctuating between water stress and water crisis since 2022. Predictions are that water availability in Iran may fall below 500 cubic meters by 2050, creating a devastating situation.

Iran’s farmers account for more than 90 per cent of water usage and have been repeatedly encouraged to accelerate crop and stock production to feed a population starved by government ineptitude, mismanagement, and tough international sanctions. Faced with dwindling water supplies, they have been forced to dig deeper wells into depleting groundwater resources to irrigate their crops and water their livestock. It is reckoned the number of wells has multiplied more than 13 times since the 1979 revolution, with most of them illegal and draining far more water than can be sustainably maintained.

In response, combining rank incompetence, venal corruption, and a total disregard for environmental concerns, the IRGC set about a decades-long programme of widespread hydropower dam building, with a series of huge and dishonestly lucrative infrastructure projects, that blocked and diverted rivers and drained lakes and aquifers. As the population of Iran expanded exponentially and climate change saw summer temperatures often soaring to 50 degrees Celsius (122F), the water crisis grew.

Deprived people living in southern, central and eastern Iran have witnessed the relentless destruction of their water infrastructure by the regime’s institutions, primarily the IRGC. The situation has become so bad that, in Sistan and Baluchistan province, water stress is reaching catastrophic levels and people are being forced to collect rainwater from ditches and crocodile-infested lakes.

Water stress is measured by the available water per cubic meter per person annually. If a country has more than 1,700 cubic meters per person per year, it is considered safe. Below 1,700 cubic meters represents water stress and below 1,000 cubic meters is a water crisis. Iran has been fluctuating between water stress and water crisis since 2022. Predictions are that water availability in Iran may fall below 500 cubic meters by 2050, creating a devastating situation.

Iran’s farmers account for more than 90 per cent of water usage and have been repeatedly encouraged to accelerate crop and stock production to feed a population starved by government ineptitude, mismanagement, and tough international sanctions. Faced with dwindling water supplies, they have been forced to dig deeper wells into depleting groundwater resources to irrigate their crops and water their livestock. It is reckoned the number of wells has multiplied more than 13 times since the 1979 revolution, with most of them illegal and draining far more water than can be sustainably maintained.

In response, combining rank incompetence, venal corruption, and a total disregard for environmental concerns, the IRGC set about a decades-long programme of widespread hydropower dam building, with a series of huge and dishonestly lucrative infrastructure projects, that blocked and diverted rivers and drained lakes and aquifers. As the population of Iran expanded exponentially and climate change saw summer temperatures often soaring to 50 degrees Celsius (122F), the water crisis grew.

But the crisis of water scarcity has long passed Khuzestan and has now reached the capital, Tehran, where thousands have taken to the streets in recent weeks to protest about water shortages. The prospect of the capital’s rebellious nine million-strong population rising up in anger terrifies the clerical regime more than anything else. But the mullahs’ only response to the growing crisis has been to threaten further violence.

It is this sort of prevailing paranoia in Iran that has hounded out those who could have helped the situation and forced a brain drain that has seen most of Iran’s best environmental scientists flee the country. As Iran creeps steadily closer towards ecological meltdown, environmental concerns have figured prominently in protests, particularly in regions populated by ethnic minorities like the Azeris and Iranian Arabs.

The mullahs have reacted with typical viciousness, shooting dead unarmed protesters and arresting hundreds of others. But as water and food shortages grow, the Iranian population is becoming increasingly aware of the fact that the government is incapable of delivering basic public goods and services. The tipping point has been reached. Without adequate supplies of food and water, more than 85 million enraged Iranians will quickly lose their fear of batons and bullets.

The only answer to the environmental crisis in Iran, as well as the answer to the economic crisis, the answer to the social crisis and the answer to the security crisis across the Middle East and worldwide is the downfall of the mullahs’ totalitarian regime.

Struan Stevenson, a former member of the European Parliament, is the coordinator of the Campaign for Iran Change and chair of the In Search of Justice committee on the protection of political freedoms in Iran. His latest book is entitled Dictatorship and Revolution. Iran – A Contemporary History.

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