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Scientists Urge Government To Keep Boosting Vital Armenian Lake

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  • Scientists Urge Government To Keep Boosting Vital Armenian Lake

    SCIENTISTS URGE GOVERNMENT TO KEEP BOOSTING VITAL ARMENIAN LAKE
    By Ruzanna Stepanian

    Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
    Aug 2 2007

    Armenian scientists have expressed serious concern about a government
    proposal to stop raising the water level of Lake Sevan, warning of a
    "irreversible" negative consequences for Armenia's ecosystem.

    The Armenian government was due to discuss a relevant decision
    drafted by the Ministry of Urban Development at its weekly meeting on
    Thursday. However, the government removed it from the agenda at the
    last minute, in an apparent response to an outcry made by the National
    Academy of Sciences. A spokeswoman said Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian
    told ministers that the matter must undergo a more thorough examination
    by experts and scientists before being decided by his cabinet.

    Sevan occupies much of the northeastern Gegharkunik province, serving
    as the landlocked country's main water reservoir. It had shrunk
    substantially throughout the 1960s and 1970s due to heavy use of
    its waters for irrigation and power generation. The process resumed
    during the severe energy crisis of the early 1990s when Armenia had
    to increase its reliance on a cascade of hydro-electric power plants
    on the river Hrazdan flowing out of the mountainous lake.

    It was not until 2002 that the government unveiled and embarked on
    the implementation of a Sevan rescue plan which was enshrined in a
    special law adopted by parliament. The government committed itself
    to gradually increasing Sevan's level by several meters by reducing
    power generation at the Hrazdan cascade and building a second mountain
    tunnel supplying water to the lake from another river.

    The tunnel went into service in summer 2002. According to the Armenian
    Ministry of Environment, Sevan's level has since increased by about two
    meters. It was supposed to rise by another three meters in the coming
    years to put Sevan's surface at 1,908 meters above the sea level.

    Some top government officials now seem keen to stop the process
    on the grounds that the swelling lake is threatening to submerge
    houses and other structures along its slanting coastline. Many of
    them are expensive villas, hotels and entertainment spots built in
    recent years despite a government ban on any construction below the
    1,908-meter mark.

    A special commission of the National Academy of Sciences dealing with
    Sevan-related ecological issues is strongly opposed to any halt in
    the lake's enlargement. Its chairman, Fadey Sargsian, wrote to the
    Armenian premier on Wednesday, warning that failure to raise the
    lake to the planned level planned could result in its "irreversible
    degradation." He pointed to a government decision whereby everything
    built along the lake's perimeter below the 1,908-meter mark is subject
    to demolition.

    Sargsian's deputy, Rafael Hovannisian, said the government is
    seriously considering the controversial proposal because of personal
    interests. "It is obvious that that is being done to preserve
    restaurants and villas," he told RFE/RL. "It is a disgrace. The
    state ignores the problem of a whole lake for the sake of several
    [wealthy] individuals."

    The Environment Ministry's position on the issue remains unclear. The
    ministry declined a comment on Thursday, referring all inquiries to
    the Ministry of Urban Development.
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