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Sevan - a Reflection of Armenia's Ecological Problems

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  • Sevan - a Reflection of Armenia's Ecological Problems

    HETQ.am

    Sevan - a Reflection of Armenia's Ecological Problems
    October 3, 2005

    Armenian experts have lately been forced to make modifications in the
    classification of Armenia's ecological problems, which had gone unchanged
    for decades. Until 2004-05 that list was as follows - Lake Sevan, air
    pollution in Yerevan, forest management, soil degradation, emissions
    control, the preservation of endemic species and so on.
    Minister of Ecology Vardan Aivazyan said that the Sevan issue was now
    entering its second stage. This means that if so far the problem was to
    prevent the water level from dropping, now the concern is to control the
    rising level of water and to supervise it, as well to ensure that it does
    not happen due to dirty water.
    Sevan in the region
    Sevan has great significance for the whole region. Vladimir Movsisyan, the
    vice-President of the Lake Sevan Expert Committee and member of the National
    Water Board, mentioned the limited reserves of drinking water in the world
    and cited findings by English researchers, which claimed that in the near
    future one liter of fresh water will have greater value than one liter of
    oil. The largest body of fresh water in our region is Lake Sevan, and by our
    region Movsisyan does not just mean the South Caucasus, but also the Near
    East.
    The high altitude of the lake (1916 m above sea level) also allows for the
    natural flow of drinking water to all the centers of the region - Yerevan,
    Baku, Tbilisi, Tavriz, Baghdad and so on.
    However...
    Sevan was "vegetating", until 2000
    >From 1933, the largest lake in the region was exploited carelessly and
    without any measures taken for replenishment. 26 cubic kilometers of water
    were released from a total volume of 58 cubic kilometers for electricity and
    irrigation purposes, thus lowering the water level by 19 meters. Naturally,
    various parameters changed drastically - the temperature and acidity of the
    water were no longer the same, the level of nitrogen products rose in the
    water, and phosphorus levels dropped. This caused the lake to "vegetate".
    "Vegetating" for a lake means to stagnate. Experts describe it in a harsher
    fashion, "The lake turned from a developing one into a dying one." Finally,
    in the 1960s, Soviet scientists came to understand this. Calculations were
    made and programs were planned that would lead to a rise in the water level
    by at least 6 meters, which would stop the stagnation, and would bring the
    water quality closer to drinking standards. It would then be possible to
    consider other measures to further raise the water quality. But even these 6
    meters seemed unrealistic back then.
    Nevertheless, the Soviet republic took a series of steps that not only aimed
    at lowering the flow of water away from the lake, but also at providing some
    inflow back into Sevan. That was the purpose behind the Arpa-Sevan-Vorotan
    tunnels, the reservoirs of Aparan, Azat and Her-her as well as the pump
    stations and irrigation systems at Ranchpar and Mkhchyan. According to
    Vladimir Movsisyan's data, these structures cost more than US $500 million.
    However, the outflow of water for electricity generation and irrigation
    continued.
    How long?
    In his interview with us, Minister of Ecology Vardan Aivazyan said that the
    1999 Presidential Order to cease outflow from Sevan for electricity purposes
    was critical in saving the lake. Besides this, the Parliament also passed a
    "law regarding Sevan" in 2001, which outlined the volume of permitted
    outflow. Thus, if the annual outflow of water from the lake earlier
    constituted up to 1-1.5 billion cubic meters (with an annual minimum of 256
    million cubic meters), this law limited it to 150-170 million cubic meters
    per year. Experts in this field say that the outflow for irrigation is
    strictly within legal limits. The Complex Program for the Replenishment of
    the Sevan Ecosystem, which planned to raise the level of the lake by 6-6.5
    meters over 30 years, was also accepted as law.
    Nature disrupts plans
    While scientists and officials were deciding to raise the water level by an
    annual 22 cm to reach their stated target after 30 years, Sevan was a step
    ahead of everyone. Over the last three years, the water level has risen by
    an annual average of 40 cm. It would seem at first that the whole country
    would rejoice at this news, but rumors doing the rounds in ecological
    circles since July suggest something quite different.
    Information surfaced in the Armenian press suggesting that the government
    wanted to arrest this rapid rise in the water level because many rich people
    had built houses and hotels on the shores of Sevan, considering the possible
    future rise in water level to be unlikely, and now this rise was threatening
    these structures.
    When the Ministry of Ecology organized discussions in this regard,
    representatives of ecological NGOs voiced concerns that their greatest fear
    was coming true - the government was not thinking about Lake Sevan, but
    rather about the interests of the owners of legal and illegal structures
    built on its banks. Gagik Tadevosyan, former president of the parliamentary
    ecological committee and currently a permanent member of the Eurasian
    committee of the Convention to Combat Desertification said, "These
    discussions aimed at gauging the attitude of the NGOs, to lay the foundation
    for the arrest of the rise in water level. They shouldn't have organized a
    discussion, they should have accelerated the realization of the annual plan
    within the Sevan Complex Program."
    The Ministry of Ecology announced that the government did not wish to slow
    the rising level of the lake, but wanted to make it more manageable. "Our
    aim is not just to raise the water level at Sevan, but also to raise it with
    clean water," said the program representatives. "Raising it with clean
    water" means to clear the area around the banks of any vegetation, forests
    and structures before they are submerged, to install water pipes for nearby
    towns and a road which would replace a nearly 30 km segment of the national
    highway which is also under threat of submersion. The government of Armenia
    plans to do so over a period of 30 years, and needs to raise the required
    US$ 300 million taking the deadline into consideration. The Minister of
    Ecology said that, at this rate, the lake will rise by 6-6.5 m of water in
    10-12 years. "A four-year interim program gave results that were 2.5 times
    greater," field experts proudly said, admitting that heavy precipitation
    also had a big role to play in the revival of Sevan.
    One step forward, two steps back?
    On September 1, 2005, when the government took the decision to increase the
    irrigational water outflow from Sevan to 150 million cubic meters, raising
    it by 30 million cubic meters, Gagik Tadevosyan said, "They are already
    lowering the water level, or, to be more accurate, they aren't letting it
    rise." Tadevosyan admitted that it was for the experts to say whether the
    extra 30 million cubic meters were necessary. However, he also added that
    the rumors mentioned above say a lot more about any such decision than the
    suggestion that it was done for irrigational purposes. Vladimir Movsisyan,
    vice-President of the Lake Sevan Expert Committee, considered the extra
    irrigational outflow to be justified, considering the relatively dry summer
    and low precipitation this year. The Ministry of Ecology also added that
    this decision was within the guidelines of the law regarding Sevan.
    Sevan keeps rising and growing in beauty
    "If this goes on, the Sevan peninsula will be an island again," said an old
    man standing on the shore, his voice filled with glee. The waves were
    noticeably higher, and the marshy portions from last year were gone without
    a trace. The vacationers on the beach said that they were very happy with
    the higher water level - the water was cleaner, and it's always more
    pleasant to swim in cleaner water. Even those who had leased portions of the
    beach were happy, although their business could suffer because of it. The
    rising water has already covered some of the beaches and continues to
    threaten others, including some of the structures built on them. In this
    case, the owners would be forced to lease other land, and also to remove
    mobile structures from where they could be submerged to safer areas.
    However, it is difficult not to believe that their positive reaction is
    genuine, even if the situation is against their financial gain. After all,
    they realize that if the lake were to stagnate, they would be lose their
    business completely.
    No need to panic
    Today 410 hectares of land has been submerged by the rising waters, of which
    100 hectares were artificial forests and do not threaten to pollute the
    lake, according to experts. But if the program to raise the water level by
    6-6.5 m is realized, then 4427 hectares of land would be submerged, of which
    3130 hectares is covered by forests.
    "I am categorically for raising the water level by 6 meters and I don't
    understand this level of concern. Why are we so panicked that it's rising?
    We took certain steps and caused the water level to rise," said Movsisyan.
    The lack of financial means at this point to prepare the surrounding land
    for further rise in the water level does not worry Movsisyan either. He said
    that the residential areas around the lake had a shortage of firewood. There
    was no need to complicate the situation by announcing tenders or
    competitions. If the government were to appeal to the local population, they
    would gladly cut the trees in the area and clear the land. As for preparing
    the remaining land for the rising waters, the finances required are not
    large, according to Movsisyan.
    "The Caucasus - one home"
    Solving the Sevan problem will not end Armenia's ecological concerns. And in
    general, in contrast to communist times, it is very difficult, and almost
    impossible, ecologically clean one country separately.
    "The Caucasus is one home," said Minister of Ecology Vardan Aivazyan,
    "Nature knows no borders, it is continuous and ubiquitous. Civilized society
    should accept responsibility for maintaining nature."
    Aivazyan said that rough calculations put the population of the South
    Caucasus at around 15 million. According to him, there are three main
    concerns for those 15 million people, which are the joint and integrated
    management of water, preservation of ecosystems and especially endemic
    species, as well as the control of industrial emissions.
    The minister assured us that there already is cooperation with Georgia over
    control of illegal deforestation. He also mentioned a unique "exchange"
    program involving the mouflon species from Armenia and royal deer from
    Georgia.
    So far cooperation with the Azerbaijani side has been limited to social
    interaction - joint discussions, round tables and seminars. However,
    Aivazyan said that it was necessary for the ministers of the two countries
    to meet, which the Armenian side had proposed, with no reaction from
    Azerbaijan so far. Why did Armenia officially not react to the news in
    Azerbaijan that Armenia was releasing cholera bacilli into the Arax river,
    which would then flow in Azerbaijan? "From time to time, Armenia responds to
    such baseless and absurd allegations, proposing visits by any international
    organization and monitoring in any format as well as in any area that causes
    concern to our neighbors. That could be deforestation, radioactive waste, or
    toxic-chemical pollution. But the Azerbaijani side never reacts to these
    proposals, despite the existence of a number of potential joint programs. On
    the contrary, Azerbaijan always politicizes these issues," said the Minister
    of Ecology. Speaking specifically about Arax, he gave the following
    explanation, "Arax flows through Iran before entering Azerbaijan. So if we
    were to pollute the river, Iran would be the first to complain. But Iran has
    no complaints." The Ministry of Ecology thought it pertinent to announce
    once more, for everyone in the whole of the South Caucasus, the decision of
    the Armenian authorities regarding the willingness to cooperate extensively
    over ecological (and not only ecological) issues in the region, despite the
    presence of conflicts and contradictions. An example of such cooperation
    could be the German "Caucasus Initiative" program, which includes
    allocations of 10 million euros to the three republics for work in the
    sphere of ecology. Armenia has already signed the contract, received the
    money, and is preparing to found the "Arpi" national park on the Javakhk
    plateau. Georgia is slightly behind, while Azerbaijan is still in the
    negotiation stage.
    Arevhat Grigoryan
    http://hetq.am/eng/ecology/0510-sevan.html
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