Mesopotamia Revitalization Project ..A Climate Change initiative to Transform Iraq and The Middle East
Context
Addressing climate change must become a national priority for Iraq. The country is one of the most at-risk from
climate-change impact; according to the UN Environment Program, Iraq is the 5th
most vulnerable globally to decreased water and food availability and extreme
temperatures. These factors pose a
long-term threat to the living conditions of millions of Iraqis, to the
long-term sustainability of the economy, and to Iraq’s national security.
The negative impacts of climate change are well-documented, and they
will only get worse, with the likelihood of more sustained higher temperatures
(according to some Iraqi studies it is expected that the average temperatures
will increase by 3 to 5 degrees centigrade compared to the 1960’s. Some international models indicates less
severe increases), more frequent drought, and rising salination. The effects of climate change are being
compounded by the lack of urgent action on the part of Iraqi policymakers, and
the continuation of wasteful practices that assume water availability is
unlimited and that energy and resource conservation are unnecessary.
As a result of these factors, 54% of our country is under serious threat
of land degradation, and desertification is affecting 39% of the land
area. Dam building on the headwaters of
our twin rivers has reduced the amount of water reaching Iraq and, as a result,
the salt wedge of the Gulf is migrating up the southern portion of Iraq,
negatively affecting our agricultural production and causing Basrah to suffer from
a lack of drinking water.
The potential human costs of these changes are immense. Seven million Iraqis have already been
affected by drought and the risk of displacement. According to Iraq’s Ministry of Water
Resources, the country could face a shortfall of as much as 10.8 billion cubic
meters of water annually by 2035. This
deficit is based on the shortfall between what is predicted to reach Iraq and
what Iraq will need for agriculture, industrial and domestic use and does not
include the potential effects of climate change on snow and rain fall and the
losses due to evaporation and increased temperatures.
Moreover, the continued use of Sumerian irrigation technology (flood
irrigation) is simply unsustainable, both because the shortage of water and,
more specifically, because of the lack of floods. Flooding is what facilitated irrigated
agriculture in Iraq, as the annual overflow swept away the accumulated salts
and deposited new layers of silt and clay, thereby renewing the vitality of the
farmlands. This is no longer possible,
due to dam building on the sources of water.
These climate changes are taking place within the context of a global
energy transition that will also impact the Iraqi economy. Demand for oil and gas is set to fall over
the coming decades, and that will dampen prices in the long term. Iraq’s oil production is some of the cheapest
and most attractive in the world. Nevertheless, the economic status quo is unsustainable. The longterm financial and economic impacts
of climate change must be fully acknowledged and planned for.
It is imperative that we act now. With Iraq’s population set to grow from 38 million today to 80 million
by 2050, and with the highest fertility rate in the Middle East, the economic
and social risks of climate change will be catastrophic for Iraq if left
unaddressed. The well-being of our
future generations is in our hands, and we have a solemn duty to live up to
that responsibility.
Vision for change
We must turn this national emergency into an opportunity to transform
the Iraqi economy fundamentally, with the goal of adapting to climate change
effects through a plan of action based on a vision that is intended to provide
better living conditions for our future generations.
The action plan envisions a comprehensive roadmap, rooted in
climate-change initiatives along with a legal and regulatory framework. The plan will deliver economic
diversification (as outlined in the White Paper), and it will promote
environmental sustainability though a series of independent steps, all of which
are connected in purpose and vision.
In taking these steps, and integrating them into global climate-change
action, we can address many of the demands of Iraqis: jobs, in sectors like
agriculture, construction, and light industry; services; welfare; economic
growth; and security. The plan will also
promote Iraq’s role as an agent of long-term positive change in the Middle East
and as the connective tissue between East and West and North and South.
This initiative – the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project – is based on
nine substantive schemes to bring about real change. It is designed to align and reinforce the
Iraqi government’s wider climate goals, to underscore and strengthen its
commitment to the Paris Agreement, and to offer regional solutions for common
climate-related challenges. To be
successful, we will need a national effort. The Mesopotamia Revitalization Project will require the participation of
the Parliament of Iraq to set the laws needed, and the executive branch lead by
the Prime Minister and the cabinet; it will necessitate the empowerment of all
relevant ministries to design and implement a series of policies and laws; it
will demand the establishment of new, specialized institutions tasked with
specifically addressing climate-change-related issues; and it will combine
state spending with funding from Green funds, private capital markets and
international donors to finance the massive new investment envisaged.
Programs
While the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project will be Iraq-focused in its
initial stages, it is designed to coordinate with and integrate Iraq with
regional economic and climate-adaptation partnerships and
interconnections. In its initial phase,
it will focus on four core areas – reforestation; water management; housing and
urbanization; and energy transition – which exploit readily available
opportunities, draw on proven technology, can take advantage of existing
funding sources, and will deliver fast results. The following nine initial projects will provide the foundations for a
more ambitious long-term economic revitalization agenda that will place Iraq at
the heart of regional change.
1. The “Garden of Eden” reforestation program
Iraq has seen its 30
million palm trees reduced by two-thirds, and the forests of Kurdistan
partially denuded over the past 40 years. Deforestation of these areas continues, albeit at a slower rate,
uprooting sometimes one-hundred-year-old vegetation.
As such, there is
huge potential for Iraq to restore and expand its palm and forest
biosphere. This initiative would provide
an effective way of capturing and harvesting greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, as
well as stabilizing soil, and decreasing salinization and desertification. Moreover, this nature-based project would
contribute directly and indirectly to bolstering the Iraqi economy, especially
in the crucial agricultural sector, by creating new jobs and providing a
springboard for industrial expansion.
As a centerpiece of
the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project, the plan proposes that Iraq begin an
immediate national effort to replant forests in southern and western Iraq (palm
and citrus) and in Kurdistan (local species). This effort will be dubbed “the Garden of Eden reforestation
program”. The initial goal would be to
plant 20-30 million palm trees within two years, restoring previous
losses. In the longer term, the aim of the
program is to plant 1 billion trees across Iraq by 2030 as well as regularly
replenishing saplings to replaces interim losses. If we can exceed the 1-billion target, we
would be not only replacing what we lost in the past decades, but also create
the infrastructure to generating agricultural products such as dates and citrus
and vegetables though the use of the shaded lands below the planted trees.
Beyond its
climate-change-mitigation impact as a carbon sink, this program would be an
economic multiplier and would deliver regional benefits. On the agricultural front, the program would
depend on Iraqi research and study for the production of saplings, which could
be generated in Iraqi academic institutions and grown by farmers. Tree nurseries safeguarding saplings through
their early years will provide new employment opportunities.
To assure
sustainability of the re forestation effort, we will be planting the saplings
using modern methods that will incentive the saplings to grow the roots to tap
into the groundwater so that we do not need to irrigate them for the long term
using surface water. This will reduce
the increased demands on water resources from planted trees. However, the planted vegetables in the shade
will be irrigated (using modern drip irrigation and other methods that do not
waste water) using treated sewage water, or harvested water, depending on the
site.
On the industrial
front, the use of water-efficient irrigation techniques, where possible, will
develop a local market for drip irrigation and rain-water harvesting equipment
that can be produced in Iraq. Indeed, as
part of the program, we will encourage investment in local light industry to
produce these parts for new irrigation systems, and to promote the recycling of
plastic products as part of that process. In areas where tributary areas are hilly and there are ravines (such as
Kurdistan and the Western Desert/Jazeera area), water harvesting will create
new job opportunities, including the construction of small and micro-dams to
recharge groundwater and to generate oases.
The
Garden of Eden reforestation program will have direct benefits beyond
Iraq. The program should be integrated
with regional initiatives, such as the 50-billion-tree project announced by
Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Iraq’s
tissue-culture research and sapling production can also be integrated with
those efforts. while it can be funded
through carbon sequestration schemes as part of the mitigation measures, it
further strengthens the
climate-adaptation front, as the benefits derived from stabilizing soil with
vegetation will contribute to a decrease in regional dust storms and other
climate phenomena at home and in neighboring states.
Funding for the
Garden of Eden program will come from a mixture of state revenue, international
donors, regional and international investors, and green funds. As a first step, Iraq should work with the
World Bank and UN agencies to complete and fund a comprehensive technical
planning, programing, and financing strategy to underpin the reforestation
program.
We must also
promulgate legislation to create a special fund to issue loans to farmers who
participate in this project. The fund
needs to be seeded by government money, combined with annual contributions from
international oil and gas companies as part of their social-responsibility
initiatives.
The fund should be
administered transparently through the Agricultural Cooperative Bank, utilizing
mobile and e-technology ensuring that the reforestation initiative will also
serve to introduce banking reform and modernization.
2. The “Green Parks” program
The reforestation
program is to be augmented with a program to preserve natural areas around
Iraq. The Ministry of Environment has
identified over 80 sites of importance from the point of view of flora and
fauna. Each one of these sites should be
studied and considered for designation as a National Park and then to have
these parks managed in an endowment for future generations of Iraqis. This will also help in complying with Iraq’s
international obligations to preserve natural sites.
Further, there is a
need to preserve the green park areas in Baghdad and other large cities in
Iraq. As a first step, this project
proposes that Baghdad Municipality and associated government agencies designate
a new Central Park for Baghdad, which will link the old Muthana Airport, the
adjacent Zawra Park, and Washash Army barracks. Beyond the benefits for air standards in Baghdad, it will provide a
place where families can enjoy nature, and as a refuge for birds and wildlife.
In addition, all new
residential projects and developments should include green park space covering
a minimum of 25% of their area. Wherever
possible and appropriate, vertical garden space should be incorporated, and
incentivized to improve air quality. The
planning departments and investment commission as well as those in charge of
enforcing building codes, should incorporate this requirement as a minimum in
the process of reviewing and approving building projects.
3. The “Twin Rivers/Rafidain” water-management program
Mitigating
heightened water-resource threats demands improvements in irrigation efficiency
across Iraq’s agricultural sector and the modernization of its water-management
strategy. Iraq’s current
water-management plans were developed during an era when there were few dams
built on the headwaters of the Tigris and the Euphrates, and floods annually
threatened the country’s major cities. Flood-control lakes are used to store water (such as Tharthar and
Habbania), but because these are relatively shallow with large surface areas,
they result in significant water evaporation (at least 8 billion cubic meters
of water per year). Evaporation and
percolation from the hundreds of thousands of canals (lined and unlined) that
Iraq uses to move water to farms and villages further contribute to evaporation
levels.
The introduction of
modern techniques to improve water management and resource preservation through
near-term measures is critical to Iraq’s future and, if implemented quickly,
could reduce total water demand for irrigation by 30% to 40% over the next 3-5
years.
Meanwhile, reduction
in irrigation-related water waste will help to reduce drainagewater problems,
and address salinization risks on farmland. Shifting from unlined gravity canals to either large-diameter pipes or
concrete-lined canals shaded with photovoltaic panels that could be used to
generate local electricity would further lessen evaporation losses in addition
to generating sustainable electricity.
To encourage this
shift, Iraq should consider new legislation to convert the government’s current
farm-support program from subsidizing agricultural output (such as buying wheat
at prices higher than the international market) to subsidizing the use of
modern irrigation and agricultural production methods, such as plastic hoses,
drip and spray heads, and hypotonic agricultural beds. These methods will also reduce the use of
fertilizers and pesticides and the use of plastic sheets to cover the soils will
also help in reducing evaporation and related desalinization. This change can happen in 4 to 5 years
through a specific program that converts 20 to 25 percent of the support
annually from buying products to modernizing 20 to 25 percent of each farm.
In addition, farmers
could be offered insurance against market-price variation by establishing
long-term contracts between producers and new food processing plants, which
could be created through government funding or through private-public
partnership. This scheme could provide an opportunity to build regional
commercial ties. As part of its funding
strategy for this transformation, Iraq should study what measures are necessary
to open up its food-processing and dairy industry to investment from neighboring
states, which could then supply the Iraqi and regional markets, and tap into
Iraq’s well educated labor force.
The modernization of
irrigation and water management would support the development of light industry
to fabricate plastics and irrigation equipment, and the production plastic pellets
needed as feedstock for this manufacturing. The Iraqi government could support this growth through the creation of
public-private partnerships to modernize existing industrial facilities in
Iraq.
This transformation
will need to begin with the relevant ministries and agencies in Iraq working
with specialized international organizations to begin to develop a
comprehensive plan to guide the Twin Rivers/Rafidain Water-Management Program
and the ancillary manufacturing industries. This effort should also seek to propose the legislative and regulatory
changes necessary to frame this transformation.
4. The “Cleansing of the Rivers” sewage program
The dumping of raw
sewage directly into the Tigris and the Euphrates rivers is an ongoing
environmental disaster. Over 5 million
cubic meters of sewage water is dumped daily into our rivers, resulting in
pollution and disease. This practice
needs to stop immediately. The relevant
Iraqi government agencies (led by municipalities, but aided and guided by the
Ministry of Environment) should immediately begin a study to determine the cost
and timeline for new sewage-treatment plants across the country that would
eliminate this dumping practice. Existing plants should be reviewed, and capital spending by the Iraqi
government utilized. Moreover, new
projects should include technology to harvest methane emissions from biological
digestion processes, and use this gas to power the sewage facilities. If excess power is generated, it can be fed
into the local grid.
In the interim,
natural-treatment systems should be introduced to mitigate the immediate threat
of dumping sewage into the waters and supplement longer-term sewage management
efforts. These natural-treatment schemes
are not as efficient as modern sewage-management mechanisms, but they would
nonetheless improve water quality and allow it to be safely reused for agriculture.
These schemes can be
implemented quickly in small villages (where they are ideal), as well as in
medium-sized cities with agricultural lands in their vicinity. This program
will be an added-value program to the Garden of Eden Reforestation program, as
the natural-treatment schemes include the planting of green reed beds and other
natural flora that can absorb the nutrients in the sewage and use the water to
grow plants that will absorb and sequester carbon dioxide. These projects can
be funded through the Green Climate Fund or the Adaptation Fund, Redd+ funds.
5. The Shatt al-Arab Grand Barrage/Bridge
Iraqi water
resources and agriculture are at risk of significant damage from the salt wedge
that is migrating up the Shatt al-Arab from the Gulf. Controlling this flow is critical to land
management, agricultural and fisheries development, and water quality. Furthermore, the reduced flows are affecting
erosional patterns in the region. Studies indicate that the slat wedge can be controlled through making
sure that the flow rates of Shat Al Arab is no less than 100 cubic meters per
second. However given that the water use
strategic studies indicate that there will be a shortfall in the water supply,
it is expected that the slat wedge will migrate as Iraq will be unable to
provide this kind of flow without an agreement with Turkey, Iran and Syria on
the management of the waters of the Tigris and Euphrates.
Plans should be
revived for installing a control barrage at the mouth of Shatt al-Arab, similar
to the Thames Barrier. This Shatt
al-Arab Grand Barrage project would allow the flow of seawater to be controlled
by closing it during high tide and opening it during low tide, allowing
salinity to be managed. It would also
have the additional benefit of helping to protect the heritage cities of
southern Iraq from the negative effects of climate change in addition to
stemming erosional patterns. Opening of
the gates during low tides will allow for the release of the polluted waters
that are dumped into shat all arab now. If the source of the polluted waters is eliminated, it will be possible
to hold the clean water and raise the level of Shat Al Arab to allow for its
use for irrigation purposes.
This project would
also have regional benefits. Any effective barrage would need to be located at
the section of the Shatt al-Arab shared with the Islamic Republic of Iran. As such, the design and construction of the
project will require bilateral cooperation and coordination, and this effort
could provide the foundation for a wider resolution of the dispute over water
rights in the Shatt al-Arab.
Furthermore, land
connections would encourage trade and regional cooperation. The barrage will be a bridge that will
connect the people of the region together, not just Iraq with Iran, but also
incorporating the larger region, including Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf
states. The Barrage should include a
lock to allow for the continuation of navigational use for small and medium
ships.
Regional
construction companies could be encouraged to bid for the project, thereby
bringing them into the Iraqi market. The
cost of construction of the Shatt al-Arab Grand Barrage is estimated at around
$1 billion. Given the high figure, we
propose that Iraq should study various funding mechanisms, including
public-private partnerships, joint financing with the Islamic republic, support
from international financial institutions, and accessing financing from
international and green investment funds.
6. The Vintage Building program
Introducing modern
building techniques and encouraging energy efficiency in urban areas will contribute to reducing Iraq’s
energy needs and its carbon footprint. Urban areas are responsible for the vast majority of GHG emissions, and
per capita energy and resource use in cities and towns are significantly higher
than in rural areas. With urbanization
rates at over 70%, and urbanization growing at over 2.5% annually, adopting
solutions to promote cleaner and more efficient building and energy-use methods
is critical for Iraq.
As a first step to
addressing these looming challenges, Iraq must introduce new energyefficiency
and construction-standards legislation, designed to reduce long-term energy
use. In particular, we must encourage
the construction of new low-cost housing in Baghdad and other major cities in
Iraq that draw on heat-management lessons from traditional old architecture
techniques, and which use mass-compacted earth technology that will reduce
energy consumption, delivering modern-style structures with smaller CO2
footprints. Government agencies and
local municipalities should study appropriate measures to retrofit government
buildings, and to encourage the introduction of renewable-energy solutions and
energy-efficient building processes.
Introducing new
building standards and energy-efficiency measures will have a potential
multiplier effect for the Iraq economy: new investment in brick-building will
be required to supply the local construction market with mass-compacted earth
technology bricks; retrofitting will generate new jobs in the construction
sector; and, in the longer term, Iraq can use this initiative to develop a
local photovoltaic industry to satisfy local demand. In all of these sectors, new jobs will be
created, and it will encourage investment by the local and international
private sector.
To expedite the
implementation and adoption of the measures discussed in the building
efficiency program, incentives should be built in. Tax breaks for developers, builders, and
manufacturers should be incorporated into the taxation code. These initiatives could be funded by
converting carbon credits accrued to the Iraqi government from GHG-reduction
funds into tax subsidies. A program
along these lines should be designed and implemented by the Ministries of
Finance and Environment, in conjunction with international agencies.
7. Waste-to-Energy (W2E) program
Modernizing Iraq’s
urban waste-management systems that capture and reuse fugitive emissions will
not only reduce Iraq’s carbon footprint but also provide a potential source of
renewable energy. The Iraqi government
and local municipalities should build on a recent initiative launched in
Sulaimania, where local cement factories coordinated with local authorities to
build a fourth-generation modern dump that captures the methane generated from
the decomposition of biological materials, and also uses plastic waste to
reduce the energy demands of its kilns. Similar schemes could be introduced in urban areas across Iraq as part
of a national waste-management and emissions-reduction initiative.
The Modern Waste
Program could be funded through a number of channels. Public funds could be made available at a
local level, but public-private partnerships could also be considered where
private-sector ventures are involved. Support and funding from the Green Climate Fund, and from other
climate-finance institutions should also be studied, as should bilateral support
from national investment funds.
8. Gas Capture program
The oil-and-gas
sector is the major contributor to GHG emissions in Iraq. Fugitive emissions from the sector alone
account for over 40% of total national emissions, largely as a result of high
levels of associated-gas flaring (Iraq ranks second in the world in terms of
total flaring, behind Russia). Venting
and fugitive emissions along the oil-and-gas value chain also contribute to
these overall numbers.
Iraq must introduce
immediate measures to reduce flaring, eliminate venting and improve
energy-efficiency in the oil and gas sector as a means of reducing emissions
levels and increasing government revenues. As such, Iraq should revisit proposals to capture flared associated gas,
and utilize it for power generation locally or export it to neighboring
states. In the longer term,
opportunities to utilize this gas in value-added petrochemical industry can
also be explored. Iraq should also
implement measures to eliminate venting and fugitive emissions from oil-and-gas
production by introducing modern monitoring mechanisms and ensuring the overall
integrity of Iraqi hydrocarbon infrastructure. Introducing renewable-energy generation to power operations in the
hydrocarbon sector would further reduce emissions.
As a first step
towards implementing this program, Iraq agencies should review existing
commercial proposals by foreign oil and gas companies for gas capture,
utilization and monetization. As part of
this effort, Iraq should also consider reviewing existing upstream contracts in
order to create more incentives for associated gas capture and for more
energy-efficient and environmentally friendly production methods. Iraq should also study regional initiatives
linked to associated gas capture and improved production methods in order to
shape its own program.
9. Green Energy program
The solar energy
potential of Iraq and the region is multiples of that of countries to the
north. Iraq is already seeking to
develop its solar energy potential, with bids solicited last year for the
creation of a 755-megawatt plant in the central Euphrates region. Further solar ventures are also being planned
with foreign investors and the ministerial council approved in June 2021 offering
12,000 mega watts of PV for investors.
Iraq should link these initiatives to a more
ambitious Green Energy program, designed to shift Iraq’s energy-use patterns,
enhance its energy efficiency, and establish the foundations for new revenue
streams over the next two decades.
As an initial step,
Iraq should accelerate investment in expanded solar-energy production to meet
rising electricity demand and reduce emissions. As part of this initiative, Iraq will need to invest in modernizing its
transmission and distribution network, allowing it to collect solar energy form
the south and deliver it to the north during the day, and hydroelectric energy
in the opposite direction at night. New
IPP models will also need to be introduced, where the electricity is purchased
by the Iraq government at a preset rate. And in the long term, these renewable sources will replace retired
thermalgeneration plants.
The program must
also seek to encourage and incentivize private homeowners to install
photovoltaic panels for residential electricity generation, and smart meters to
reduce overall energy use. Campaigns to
encourage energy efficiency should also be introduced.
Iraq should also
consider leasing out lake surfaces for photovoltaic production of PV. Similar programs have been introduced
successfully elsewhere, such as Malaysia. There may be inefficiencies associated with installing photovoltaic
panels on floating frames, but a reduction of evaporation due to the cover
provided would be sufficient compensation.
In the longer term,
Iraq’s Green Energy program should be designed to be a source of income and to
promote regional links. Transition
networks should be established with a view to exporting any eventual excess
power generation north and south, and to be a transport route for solar
electricity from the Gulf to Turkey and Europe. Storage mediums such as hydrogen and ammonia should also be developed in
the longer-term, providing more industrial potential and attracting regional
and international investment.
Regional Framework
While it is primarily a national initiative, the Mesopotamia
Revitalization Project is also designed to address regional climate-change
issues. Regardless of the political
disagreements in between the countries in the region, Climate Change is a foe that
will affect all our region negatively. We must face that together as it is a regional, nay Global, threat.
Iraq is at the center of this region historically and metaphorical and
as such, we should capitalize on our historic role to help Iraq and the region
though promoting economic and political cooperation and stability in the Middle
East that will inevitably result in co-dependence and economic mutual benefits.
The project focuses on creating the necessary conditions for peace and
stability, and it will reinforce this ambition in three ways:
Water security.Issues of water scarcity, and their impact, are not confined to Iraq.Water security has been a growing risk in the Middle East for the past half century, and the dangers associated with limited water availability and reduced flows are rising.The gulf waters increased salinity will soon make desalination uneconomical for people in the Gulf.It need not be said that lack of water will result in major population displacements be it in Syria, Iraq, Iran, or elsewhere in the Gulf.
In addressing its own
water-management challenges, Iraq can potentially act as a model for the
region, and draw on regional initiatives. Moreover, it would provide a starting point for much-needed discussions
on water-sharing with its neighbors up stream and downstream. The water efficiency initiatives, when
implemented properly, will allow for water to be available to share with down
stream users, and the same efficiency schemes can be used up stream. Increased links and co dependence, will
result in building the trust bonds needed to encourage co management of the
water resources for the benefit of the entire basin and not only Turkey, Iran,
Iraq and Syria. Co dependence will
dictate and yield naturally to commonwealth and cooperation.
Food security.Prior to the political calamities of the late 20th and early 21st centuries, Iraq was a regional breadbasket.The country’s abundance of natural resources and its climate allowed for year-round agricultural production, creating a surplus of produce that could be exported.
A long-term goal of
Iraq’s efforts to improve water availability, salinity levels, and land
preservation is to restore agricultural production to levels where it can again
play this key role in the future, taking advantage of its strategic location at
the center of northsouth and east-west trade routes.
Land security.Threats of desertification and associated meteorological risks are not confined to Iraq; they threaten the Middle East as a whole.Already the incidents of dust storms have negatively affected Iraq and its neighbors.This is not because of Iraq alone, but a regional degradation and even a world wide phenomena.By addressing its own land-management challenges, Iraq can provide lessons for the wider region.It will also allow cooperation and coordination of land-management initiatives across the Middle East.The ultimate result of the reforestation program is not only carbon sequestration but also a suppression of the dust storms and the stemming of the losses due to desertification.
In the longer term, the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project is designed
as a foundation for more extensive climate-adaptation measures that will drive
economic growth and regional integration. Our ambitions should be grand. Given its strategic geographic position, Iraq can develop itself as a
critical commercial artery linking the Gulf to Europe. The opportunity exists for Iraq to develop as
a “dry canal,” transforming itself into a transport route for energy, trade,
natural resources, and digital technology.
Road and rail routes utilizing electricity and hydrogen technology could
be developed, including the necessary supporting infrastructure. These lines could be used to connect the
ports of Fao, Kuwait, and Abadan to Europe, and would offer an alternative
route for surplus freight that cannot be shipped to the Suez Canal
(alternatively, a trade agreement could be reached with Egypt to establish a
common north-south transport company). Transport lines for energy exports from the Gulf region, and overland
digital connections could also be included.
Implementation
Designing and implementing the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project’s various initiatives will require appropriate
institutional arrangements, and it may involve the passage of dedicated
legislation to create the legal and investment environment to promote the
changes envisioned.
a. Institutional arrangements
Success of the
Mesopotamia Revitalization Project will depend on adopting a whole-ofgovernment
approach that links appropriate ministries and agencies in a coordinated
fashion. A number of critical
institutional moves will be needed to kick off the Project:
Accelerate the administrative separation the Ministries of Health and Environment, and consider appointing a new Minister for the Environment.The position should be a deputy prime minister for environmental affairs with special duties to over see the development and implementation of plans and strategies to deal with climate change and protection of the environment.
Empower the Nationally Declared Contributions Committee that is tasked with designing Iraq’s commitments under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change with executive agency to design and coordinate Iraq’s climate policy.
Establish an Independent Climate Advisory Committee, headed by a respected scientific or business leader, to advise the Iraqi government on climate-change strategy.
Following the lead of international banking institutions in considering CO2 reduction measures, all projects funding by the Iraqi government or where loans are issued by Iraqi banks should incorporate a CO2 reduction measure in compliance with Iraq’s obligations under the Paris Agreement accords.
b. Legislation
The executive branch
should consider putting to the Council of Representatives a set of laws to
underpin and facilitate the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project’s various
initiatives, and to establish the necessary institutional structures.
c. Awareness and education
The Iraqi government
should consider launching a nationwide public awareness campaign to inform and
promote its climate and energy-efficiency policies, using social and
traditional media, and to encourage changes in individual habits. Local education campaigns to promote water-
and land-management, and the benefits of modern irrigation and farming methods,
should also be considered.
d. Stakeholder engagement
In order to build popular
awareness and support for the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project, Iraq
government agencies, including the Office of the Presidency, should consider a
broad stakeholder-engagement campaign, targeting both the targets of these
initiatives and national groups engaged in promoting green policies and energy
transitions (such as Green Iraq).
e. Funding and technical support
In order to ensure
the success of the Mesopotamia Revitalization Project, Iraq should seek support
from specialized international agencies and funding bodies to design, implement
and finance its climate-adaptation efforts. Institutions such as the World Bank, the IMF, UN agencies and the EU
have significant experience in assisting programs worldwide, and Iraq can
benefit tremendously from this knowledge. Moreover, a variety of financing option exist through specialized
funding agencies and green investment funds dedicated to supporting
climate-adaptation initiatives. Support
from these bodies will be critical especially in the early phases of the
project.
Nature itself gives us the most wondrous example of an interconnected
global network, while we have to designate and delegate to achieve our
goals. We should keep sight of each of
the above initiatives as integral and interconnected parts of a greater whole,
of Iraq as a vital part of a greater region and indeed the global community.
Presedent