Albedo side effects? - G

Iran, Iraq pay $1.2 bn to battle sandstorms
by staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Oct 3, 2011

A top Iranian environment official said on Monday Tehran and Baghdad will 
jointly pay $1.2 billion in a project to reduce the number of sand dunes in a 
bid to cut the number of sandstorms from Iraq.

"In order to reduce gravel levels we have signed an agreement with a foreign 
company worth $1.2 billion to cover a million hectares (2.47 million acres) of 
Iraqi soil in the next five years," the official IRNA news agency quoted the 
head of Iran's Environmental Protection Organisation as saying.

The name of the foreign firm was not given.

"This initiative began with 500 hectares and in our negotiations (with Iraq) it 
was decided to either use fossil materials (petroleum products) or biological 
ones to stabilise the dunes," Mohammad Javad Mohammadi-Zadeh added.

Media and some local officials have blamed sandstorms on countries west of the 
Islamic republic, particularly Iraq which has been hit by desertification and 
deforestation because of dam construction and declining agriculture.

In mid-April, 20 of Iran's 31 provinces had to close schools and government 
offices, and flights to and from some western cities were cancelled because of 
sandstorms mostly originating in neighbouring Iraq.

The problem of sandstorms from Iraq has been blamed on two decades of on-off 
wars, with officials there saying the number of palm trees has fallen by two 
thirds from around 36 million to just 12 million.

In September 2010, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Qatar and Turkey signed an accord in 
Tehran aimed at tackling the sandstorms problem over the next five years.

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