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Armenia To Help Iran Save Dying Lake Urumieh

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  • Armenia To Help Iran Save Dying Lake Urumieh

    ARMENIA TO HELP IRAN SAVE DYING LAKE URUMIEH

    http://www.tehrantimes.com/economy-and-business/100218-armenia-to-help-iran-save-dying-lake-urumieh

    On Line: 03 August 2012 15:31
    In Print: Saturday 04 August 2012

    A senior Iranian official announced that Iran is enlisting Armenia's
    aid to resolve the rapid drying of Lake Urumieh.

    Lake Urumieh is a salt lake in northwestern Iran near Turkey. The lake
    is between the provinces of East Azarbaijan and West Azarbaijan, west
    of the southern portion of the similarly shaped Caspian Sea. It is the
    largest lake inside Iran, and the third salt water lake on earth, with
    a surface area of approximately 5,200 km square (2,000 mile square).

    MohammadJavad Mohammadzadeh, the head of Iran's Environment
    Protection Organization, announced that Iran and Armenia have agreed
    on transferring water from Armenia to counter the critical fall in
    Lake Urumieh's water levels.

    He remarked that hot weather and a lack of precipitation have brought
    the lake to its lowest water levels ever recorded.

    He added that recovery plans for the lake include the transfer of
    water from Eastern Iranian Azerbaijan Province.

    Previously, Iranian authorities had announced a plan to transfer water
    from the Aras River, which borders Iran and Republic of Azerbaijan.

    But that country objected, and the 950-billion-touman plan was
    scrapped.

    Armenia and Iran recently signed an agreement to cooperate on
    environmental projects.

    Iran maintains that the drying of Lake Urumieh would be a "national
    environmental catastrophe" that could also have adverse effects on
    neighboring countries.

    Iranian officials have reported that half of the lake, a surface area
    of more than 3,000 square kilometers, has dried up and turned into
    salt fields.

    In past months, clashes have broken out in Tabriz and Urumieh between
    government forces and protesters, who blame local mismanagement of
    provincial affairs for the drying of the lake.

    With the rapid evaporation of lake waters and the increase in salt
    concentration, certain sea weeds have turned the lake water red.

    Iranian environmentalists have warned that without "speedy, serious
    and national action", salt storms will develop that could reach as
    far as Tehran province.

    (Source: asbarez)

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