Resolving the problems caused by the
drying out of the Aral Sea, which has shrunk drastically in size in recent
decades because of the inefficient use of water resources and climate
change, will only happen when the countries of Central Asia work together,
the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) says.
The problems “cannot be solved through
the efforts of a single country,” UNDP Regional Director for Europe and the
Commonwealth of Independent States Kori Udovicki told the Aral Sea Forum
Seminar, held at UN Headquarters in New York yesterday.
She called on the countries of Central
Asia, as well as international donors, regional organizations and civil
society, to begin a concerted collaborative effort to produce “marked
improvements in mitigating the effects of the environmental and
socio-economic disaster.”
In 1960 the Aral Sea was the
fourth-largest inland water body in the world, but the diversion of
tributary rivers for irrigation projects has slashed its size to about 10
per cent of the original. It has raised the salinity of the area’s soil,
reducing the amount of arable land, causing irreversible losses in flora and
fauna and depriving millions in neighbouring countries of critical sources
of income. The region is also heavily polluted.
Ms. Udovicki said the Tashkent
Conference on the issue, held in March, ended with a declaration from
experts and representatives of governments and civil society that assistance
to the area must be enhanced.
She stressed that the “solution to
these problems is possible only through transboundary cooperation and UNDP
is firmly committed to support these efforts,” adding that improving the use
of water resources will be key to tackling the problems.
In a separate presentation to the
seminar, the UN Environment
Programme
and many regional organizations on initiatives to encourage collaboration
between the countries and to map out potential strategies for dealing with
the problems.
UNEP noted that many people in the
region are experiencing severe health problems because of the poor quality
of the drinking water.
The seminar was organized by
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, which all
lie in the basin of the Aral Sea and its tributary rivers. A photo
exhibition on the subject is also being staged at UN Headquarters.
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