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Key Iraq irrigation reservoir close to drying out by AFP Staff Writers Hamrin, Iraq (AFP) May 22, 2022 Iraq's Lake Hamrin, a once-vast reservoir northeast of Baghdad that is the sole source of water for irrigation across Diyala province, has nearly dried out, a senior official said Friday. Successive years of low rainfall and a sharp reduction in the flow of water down the Sirwan River from neighbouring Iran have reduced much of the lake to a dust bowl, the official told AFP. "There has been a sharp reduction in the water level -- reserves currently stand at 130 million cubic metres against two billion cubic metres normally," said Aoun Dhiab, a senior adviser in the water ministry. Dhiab said a number of factors were to blame including the prolonged drought and Iranian dam construction and river diversion projects upstream. Dhiab said it was not the first time water levels had fallen so low. "In 2009, the lake dried out completely. There was just a stream." He said the impact on surrounding farmland should not be underestimated. "There are no other sources of water in the province -- the volume arriving in Lake Hamrin is the volume used in the province." He said the government had asked Iran to increase the flow of water across the border. Otherwise all that could be done was to pray for higher rainfall next year. The problem is not exclusive to Diyala province. The World Bank predicts that without major changes, Iraq will have lost 20 percent of its water resources by 2050. The country is classified as one of five most vulnerable to climate change effects and desertification. Water shortages have led this year to reduced quotas for rice and wheat farmers. Iraq's upstream neighbours Iran, Turkey and Syria experience similar shortfalls, meaning that its appeals for help generally fall unheaded.
US high schoolers design low-cost filter to remove lead from water Washington (AFP) May 22, 2022 When the pandemic forced schools into remote learning, Washington-area science teacher Rebecca Bushway set her students an ambitious task: design and build a low-cost lead filter that fixes to faucets and removes the toxic metal. Using 3D printing and high-school level chemistry, the team now has a working prototype - a three-inch (7.5 centimeter) tall filter housing made of biodegradable plastic, which they hope to eventually bring to market for $1 apiece. "The science is straightforward," Bus ... read more
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