By Mohammad Eskandari (Source:
The Middle East Institute)

Tehran under the smug
Pollution
is a familiar story to Tehranis. Every winter a black, smelly cloud accumulates
over Tehran. But the scale and intensity of the newest phase of invading toxic
pollutants seems to have taken everybody by surprise. The sick and elderly are
warned to stay indoors. Schools might be closed for a week. The officials
estimate that the life expectancy of every resident of Tehran has dropped by
five years due to pollution. And the argument over which institutions are
responsible, and what measures should be taken, seem to be leading nowhere. The
cars responsible for producing over 90% of the pollutants are an integral part
of urban transportation and a vital source of income for many Tehranis. At the
same time, the government is paying over $9 billion every year to subsidize
gasoline that keeps the cars running. Even so, Tehran's air pollution is but one
case among the complex environmental problems in need of radical changes that
are too politically sensitive to be taken on by any government.

Tehran
residents affected by pollution
As
Tehran's air pollution crisis reached its peak, Iran's first environmental news
agency — IREN — launched its website.[1] Almost all other national and local
dailies also cover environmental news routinely. Many even have a special
environmental page, a sign of heightened environmental awareness. Yet the very
existence of these newspapers is under threat. An increasing number of papers
and journals recently have been forced to shut down following sham trials, while
the remaining ones find themselves at the mercy of a unrelenting press court and
a repressive press law.
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Mohammad Eskandari was born in Tehran. He completed his MA in Economics
at the University of Tehran and then worked as a translator and editor
for more than ten years. He is currently a PhD student of Geography at
Clark University. His areas of interest lie mainly in development
theory, political economy, and the geopolitics of the Middle East.
|
The
number of environmental NGOs has been on the rise since President Muhammad
Khatami opened the door to civil society institutions. One expert put their
number at 500 in 2003.[2] These grassroots initiatives are promising indeed. Yet
most of them have few or no resources — no labs, maps, or satellite image
processing capability. They rely completely on the voluntary work of concerned
citizens. They do not have a clear mission. In most cases, their officials are
poorly trained and are poorly connected to universities or research
institutions. And their activists try to stay away from suspected international
advocacy institutions. Most importantly, they have no clear standing in the
decision-making process. No wonder these NGOs have not yet been able to
successfully oppose even a single project in the country.
There are
reports about the sad condition of Iranian lakes, rivers, groundwater, and other
water systems. Lake Bakhtegan has gone completely dry.[3] Anzali lagoon is
considered by many experts to be terminally doomed.[4] Zayandeh Rood River in
Isfahan annually goes dry in some seasons.[5] And with the demise of each, whole
ecosystems are gone forever. Apart from record level drought, extensive dam
construction and water diversions are behind this sad scene. Iranian officials
seem to be obsessed with dam construction, when the adverse social, economic,
and environmental impacts of large dams are now common knowledge. The guiding
principle of water management in Iran is still the discredited view of not
letting any drop of water be "wasted."[6] The result is drying lakes. Why are
dams still so central to water management in top-down development practices in
Iran? Why is the opposition to them ignored even in the most extreme cases, such
as Sivand Dam in Fars Province?

Shiraz, another big city affected by pollution
Lake
Uromiyeh in the northwest has been in the news lately because it is going dry
and its marine life is being destroyed. This is also a result of dams and water
diversions.[7] This lake also has been subject to one of the world's most
bizarre engineering projects: a bridge is being built by pouring cement, sand,
and rock into the bottom of the lake to fill it up to the surface and literally
cut it in half. The idea is to build a road through it that reaches the bottom
of the lake.[8] Had the bridge been
completed as originally designed, the project would have disrupted completely
the ecological life and functions of this lake. Needless to say, thius unified
body of water kept moving, defying the engineering feat. How are these
"development" decisions made? Who is overseeing the implementation of these
projects? Where is Iran's Environmental Protection Organization?
|

The Iranian Revolution at 30
Source: The Middle East Institute
www.mideasti.org
This wide-ranging mega-collection of more than 50 original
essays is the first of a series of six similar publications
commemorating the events of 1979.
|
In the
north of Iran, all reports indicate that the Caspian Sea is seriously ill. Its
only mammal, the Caspian seal, is disappearing at an alarming rate.[9]
Overfishing is threatening its fish stocks and fisheries, and its sturgeon and
other caviar producing fish are going extinct.[10] A kind of comb-jelly fish,
Mnemiopsis, an invasive species, is destroying the ecological balance.[11]
Oil pollution, nuclear pollution, and urban waste are running into it and are
threatening the ecosystem. Yet Iran and the other countries surrounding this
body of water are still fighting over how to divide it between them. How are
they going to address the pressing environmental problems of this sea absent a
working framework for dialogue and cooperation?
What do
these snapshots suggest? That the environmental problems faced by Iran are tied
to Iran's confused and rapidly changing political scene. Three decades after the
revolution of 1979, there is still intense competition among political factions
on how to define what it means to be an Islamic Republic. It is still not clear
what it means to be a citizen of Iran, i.e. what rights and duties come with
citizenship. A degree of freedom of the press exists, but the free press is
still under constant threat. It is still not clear what model of economic
development the country is pursuing. It is not clear how important decisions are
negotiated, what institutions are involved, where the general public stands with
regard to them, who is participating, whose values and aspirations are
represented through what mediums, and whose voice is silenced. Overseeing
institutions are constantly sidelined. The relationship between Iran and its
neighbors, while friendly, is far from actively cooperative. Iran's relations
with the international community and international institutions of governance
are also ridden with tensions. It is only in this political context that Iran's
mounting environmental problems can be understood. Absent a resolution of these
contradictions, the environmental problems faced by Iran are the last thing in
the mind of its citizens.
-
Iran NonGovernment Environment News Network.
See also B. Rohani's
interview with
Nasser Karami at Radio Zamaneh.
-
See Bagher Namazi's summary
report about Iran's NGOs at the Wilson Center. Mr. Namazi, who has been
running an NGO empowerment center, the Iran NGO Initiative, is the most
reliable source about Iranian NGOs, yet this number should be taken with
caution. Some of these so-called NGOs consist of a few enthusiasts in a
small neighborhood
-
with no real
activity other than regular friendly meetings.
-
"Bakhtegan
lake gone dry," BBC Persian, August 28, 2008.
-
Holčik, J. and J.
Oláh, "Fish,
fisheries and water quality in Anzali lagoon and its watershed," FAO.
-
"Zayandeh
Rood gone dry," BBC Persian, June 29, 2008.
-
Persistence on not
letting water be 'wasted' by completing its circle is such a common view in
Iran that it is even repeated in Friday prayers.
Zoltan Vekerdy, "Integrated
Water Resource Management for the Uromiyeh Basin," Water Food
Ecosystems.
See also these two news reports about the bridge: B Rohani, "Environmental
impacts of Uromiyah bridge," RadioZamaneh, and Esmail Karom, "Environment,
the victim of poorly studied development projects," Radiozamaneh.
"Caspian's
only mammal on the verge of extinction," BBC Persian, October 14, 2008 .
"Iranian
official warns Kaviar fish going extinct in a decade," BBC Persian,
September 21, 2008, .
UNDP,
"Comb-jelly
spreading through the Caspian Sea."
... Payvand News - 02/17/09 ... --
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