Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 14 – The Aral Sea
has dried up to the point that it can no longer be saved, but if there is
enough funding, its former seabed could become a forest, a development that
would limit the amount of rare earth minerals being carried off by the winds
and causing cancer and other diseases in the population of the surrounding
areas.
Ten years ago, there were only six
million hectares of seabed exposed because of the drying out of the sea; now,
there are ten million; and it is clear that the sea cannot be revived. Instead,
Uzbek experts argue the region must plant tree, something that may not happen
because of a shortage of funds (uznews.net/article_single.php?lng=ru&cid=22&aid=1109).
Indeed, in Uzbekistan today, the government
appears to be devoting less effort to planting trees in the former seabed to
hold the soil against the winds and to help filter what water there is
naturally than it did a decade ago when the sea was larger and there was more
hope that its desiccation could be reversed.
Prior to 2005, there were more than
300 people working at the Uzbek research institute charged with this task. That
body was disbanded, and its successor had its staff cut first to 64 and now “all
of 39.” As a result, Uznews.net reported
yesterday, the former seabed is unlikely to be seeded before the end of this century.
This situation reflects a lack of
financing, and that in turn reflects both government cutbacks and a reluctance
of the international community to acknowledge that the Aral, which has been
killed by a combination of overpopulation, cotton monoculture, and both
leaching and evaporation, is too far gone to be recovered.
As a result, as the sea continues to
contract, ever larger areas of its former bed are swept by the winds, and the
minerals are blown into the atmosphere where they are then breathed in by
people living nearby. Such people
increasingly become ill, and as the sea continues to die, their numbers and
deaths will mount as well.
Planting trees could limit that and
thus reverse a public health disaster, but despite an understanding of that in
the local environmental community, there is little money for such activities at
the present time. Indeed, there is less
money now when the need is greater than there was earlier.
A present, there are 95 tree farms
in Uzbekistan and Karakalpakia, the hardest hid region which adjoins where the
Aral used to be, and if all their production was directed at the old sea bed,
they could provide trees that would cover 120 hectares of forest each year.
With sufficient funding, they could transform the Aral from a dying sea into a
living forest in 50 years.
That may not have the glamour of “saving
the Aral,” but it would save many lives.
As Uzbekistan expert Sergey Shaburyan observes, “the Aral is beyond
saving. It will continue to dry out, but it is possible to reduce [the
consequences of that] to nothing if there would be enough financing.”
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