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Cyprus conflict closes leaders' eyes to water shortage

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Cyprus conflict closes leaders' eyes to water shortage

Postby Gasman » Sat Jul 17, 2010 10:18 am

Water has been rapidly disappearing in Cyprus since the 1970s, but conflict between Turkish and Greek communities means fixing the problem is not high on the political agenda. Alex Bell finds that Cypriots are now struggling for control of land that is slowly dying.

Here is a story: an old man from the Troodos hills of central Cyprus rises to his feet at a public meeting about the environment. He says that when he was young, his school teacher asked the class who could swim, and about half the hands went up.

Then the teacher said: "Who has been to the beach?" and this time, only two hands went up.

The moral of the story? I'll come back to that in a moment.

We are in Nicosia, one of Europe's last divided cities, and the focus of a bitter and bloody feud between Greek Cypriots and Turkish Cypriots.

It goes back to 1974, when the island was divided, as Turkish troops invaded - following a collapse of the Cypriot government.

It goes back further, to 1963, when the UN mission began here - never to leave as it tried to keep the sides apart.

It goes back further still, to 1960, when the British left - knowing, surely, that claims of peace on this Mediterranean island, tucked in the armpit between Turkey and Israel, might never come to bloom. It keeps on going back and back…

Water war
I am here to cover a war - but not the one that has seen shabby oil drums erected in higgledy-piggledy piles as barriers dividing the city.

The war I'm interested in is the water war - not an armed conflict, but a struggle nonetheless, between people and a rapidly disappearing resource.

The alarming thing, for those working to ease this new conflict, is that Cypriots don't even seem to realise that hostilities between them and nature have begun.

Charalampos Theopemptou is the Greek Cypriot side's Environment Commissioner, and it was he who told me the story about the old man in the classroom. He explains its meaning: that within living memory Cyprus was wet - there were plenty of rivers and lakes to swim in. Now, they are all gone.

The island has reached what geographers call Peak Water - when demand meets and then outstrips supply.

Peak Oil is already a familiar concept, and commands international attention. However, water, despite being central to life, is having a much harder time getting on to the political radar.

Dying land
Dig into the details of the current war and it seems to have less to do with fighting than it does with land.

The issue that stalls peace talks is the question of houses and farms that were seized in the 1974 conflict. On both sides, people would like their houses back, or a cheque in compensation.

The gradual effect of increasing wealth, EU membership for the south, and the opening of the borders, has defused tension, and means that the eternal subject of property prices is now at the heart of the issue.

The irony is that the Cypriots, all of them, are fighting over land, which is slowly dying.

The famous trees of Cyprus are rotting on their waterless roots, turning to dry kindling as they stand in the blazing sun.

Ever since the 1970s, rainfall has been scarcer, meaning far less water reaching the reservoirs.

For the past four decades, getting enough water to the farms and the people has been a struggle.

The general dampness of nature is drying up, like a rag that is being wrung ever tighter.

This is why the European Commission believes Cyprus is the canary in the coalmine: what happens on this island is threatened to happen all across the drier parts of the continent.

Experts agree that this crisis can be tackled, but first you have to recognise it's there - and that's part of the problem.

Even the proposed solutions can be problematic.

Desert resort
Nicos Vassillou is a small man in his 70s with decades of experience planning and consulting for the Cypriot government. You might also call him a visionary.

He believes he has a way to solve Cyprus's problems in one fell swoop - a plan for a pipeline from the Turkish mainland to Cyprus, which will not only meet current demand, but also supply extra to irrigate the parched fields.

As we talked in a hotel lobby, he painted me a picture of the island transformed back into a verdant paradise and one where peace might reign.

But the Cypriot government is sceptical - not least because this plan would hand control of the water supply to Ankara, its sworn enemy. And it seems that it still can't quite believe the water will really run out.

It has put its money behind de-salination plants, powered by oil-fired electricity stations, which it hopes will supply the cities with water by 2012.

It has also regularly imposed water rationing - but has turned its back on water conservation and recycling schemes, or even fixing the leaking water pipes.

The irony is that Cyprus is already considered a kind of paradise by many people - its main business is tourism, and selling property to north Europeans looking for a warmer life.

The question is, will anyone want to come and swim here at all if the holiday resorts are no more than manufactured oases within a desert?

While the real, political war steals the headlines for now, the water war is threatening to steal the future of a place once known as the Green Island.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/from_our_own_correspondent/8560424.stm
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Postby Gasman » Sat Jul 17, 2010 3:19 pm

Cyprus ‘to run out of drinking water’

March 22, 2010
Alex Bell is the author of Peak Water: Civilisation and the world’s water crisis,which is available on Amazon.


Cyprus is predicted to become the first part of the European Union to run out of water. A spokesman at the EU Commission said the Mediterranean island was Europe’s ‘front line’ in the war against diminishing water resources.

Divided by war in 1974, the former British colony has been consumed by the rivalry between Greek and Turkish Cypriots. The generation-old conflict has obscured the environmental disaster that has empty reservoirs, led to water rationing and is killing the island’s ecosystem.

Rainfall in Cyprus has dropped by 15% since the 1970’s. Since then the country has been parched by long droughts broken briefly by occasional downpours.

Engineers say water reserves can only reach half of what they were in the 1960’s, and that is during wet periods.

Things are likely to get significantly worse. Walter Gammeltoft, known in the EU Commission as ‘Mr Water’ and the head of the Commission’s research into water and climate change, says all predictions show Cyprus getting up to 20% less water by 2050.

“Water is how we will feel the impact of climate change. Either too much or too little of it. Cyprus is in the front line of water shortages for the EU,” says Gammeltoft.

The Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia has decided to make a dash for desalination and is building three new plants. But converting the salty sea into drinking water cannot replace the loss in natural supply.

The Environment Commissioner of Cyprus predicts that while the taps will run for the urban population, the land will wither and die from drought.

Cyprus has chosen desalination plants powered by oil-fired electricity stations, thus contributing to the fossil fuel emissions that are thought to be accelerating climate change. The EU has demanded an Environmental impact assessment report on the island’s water policy. Sources suggest this may result in the whole water management regime being called into question.

The boom in tourism and holiday home construction and the modernization of the economy has resulted in higher water use per capita. Any challenge to Nicosia’s water policy would raise questions about its economic future. The end of the property bubble coupled to declining tourist numbers and the high value of the Euro have already put unemployment up and GDP down.

The crisis has given new credibility to a scheme to build a pipeline from Turkey to Cyprus supplying fresh water. A private plan to lay a plastic tube on the seabed the 75km from coast to coast has won the interest of the European Investment Bank and a consortium of banks and oil companies. However, as the plan would mean handing control of water to the Greek Cypriots sworn enemies in Ankara, the scheme is unlikely to proceed until the water shortage becomes desperate.
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Postby Nikitas » Sun Jul 18, 2010 3:10 pm

"within living memory Cyprus was wet - there were plenty of rivers and lakes to swim in. Now, they are all gone."

Really? We had running rivers and lakes in Cyprus in living memory? What a load of CRAP!!!

In the 1930 my grandfather brought water to his village, a deed which earned him respect and what amounted to real money back then. The "water" was a stone stream measuring a foot wide and a couple of inches deep. Yes, it was stored in a cistern where kids swam, but it was hardly a lake.

This is typical BBC "green" reporting which is to say total bullshit. It is unfortunate, for the "reporter" that it comes at a time when all dams in the RoC are at record levels. Sure there is a water problem, there always was, but to talk about Cyprus being the green island contradicts the writings of every traveler and diarist of the past. Cyprus was never a green island.

We have enough problems without these "green" goons adding to them.
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Postby CBBB » Sun Jul 18, 2010 5:33 pm

Apart from that Nikitas, the report is from March, not exactly news!
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Postby Gasman » Sun Jul 18, 2010 9:01 pm

Yes all of four months old. At least it wasn't from four hundred years ago!

Not sure what the responses mean really. Are you saying there is NO water shortage in Cyprus?
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Postby humanist » Sun Jul 18, 2010 10:26 pm

Turkey has offered water to the GC's in the past haven't they? Perhaps when their partition of Cyprus comes into place legally they may give us some water as a good will gesture
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Postby CopperLine » Sun Jul 18, 2010 10:31 pm

Gasman is right to highlight this, but the headline "Cyprus conflict closes leaders' eyes to .............' could be applied to virtually every environmental and social issue on the island. The lack of resolution to the Cyprus question has done nothing but harm to all Cypriots. The refusal to deal with other questions until the 'problem' has been settled has simply made problems in other areas much worse.
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