26 Dec 2024
Tuesday 1 August 2017 - 10:01
Story Code : 270540

Iraq oil pipeline comes with major environmental costs

Al Monitor | Adnan Abu Zeed: On July 21,farmers complainedabout a gas pipeline dredging their farmlands. The pipeline carries gas from Iran to Baghdad through Bismayah, which is located in southeast Baghdad. Meanwhile,reportson May 22 revealed that the pipeline causeddamage to an archaeological siteunder which it passes.


On March 17, 2016, Iranannounced the completionof a 100-kilometer (62-mile) Iranian gas pipeline. It starts at the South Pars gas field and continues to Baghdad to provide fuel for the electricity stations. As part of the project, the Oil and Energy Committee of the Iraq Council of Ministers decided to extend the pipeline through Bismayah to provide gas for electricity stations there.

Many residents in Bismayah were happy at first. However, their happiness did not last as they were forced to vacate parts of their land for the project. According to testimonies documented in avideo reportbroadcast by an Iraqi channel on May 22, a farmer said that a military force stormed onto his land and forced him to accept the extension of the pipeline into his land without providing any documents, which he considered a violation of his rights and of applicable laws.

On July 12, Al-Monitor contacted the Nahrawan police directorate, which said, The security force securing the site has orders to protect the project of extending the Bismayah gas pipeline and remove any constraints that may hinder its accomplishment.

In a country like Iraq,environmental awarenessis still weak and procedures of environmental safety do not apply. The phenomenon of dredging farmlands and causing damage to archaeological sites has become quite familiar. In July 2016, anAl-Monitor reportstated that UNESCO would not name Babylon a World Heritage site as long as an oil pipeline crossed the historical site.

 

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