From
Lebanese Forces Official Website
Climate Change Threatens Cradle of Civilization
By Volker Mrasek - Spiegel
Apr 16, 2008 - 2:29:50 PM

Climate change could turn the Fertile Crescent into a barren landscape.
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The
Middle East's famous Fertile Crescent was the birthplace of
agriculture, the first settlements and civilization. But a new study
shows that climate change will dry up the area's rivers and destroy its
agriculture -- with devasting effects for the region.
The region known as the Fertile Crescent forms a 3,000- kilometer
(1,900-mile), sickle-shaped corridor at the northern end of the Arabian
Peninsula. Embedded in desert and barren mountains, it extends in a
giant arc from the Nile valley in Egypt to the east coast of the
Mediterranean and up to the Persian Gulf. It runs right through Israel,
Lebanon and western Syria, touches southern Anatolia, then Iran and
finally descends into the area between the Euphrates and Tigris, in
modern-day Iraq.
It is a landscape of truly epic importance. It is the cradle of
agriculture and livestock farming, where 10,000 years ago the Neolithic
Revolution began -- the transformation from Stone Age nomads to settled
populations, combined with the rise of the first towns and
civilizations. There, the Sumerians scratched wedge-shaped symbols into
clay tablets and created the world's first script.
But the area known as the cradle of civilization is now under serious
threat. Before the end of this century, the Middle East's legendary
bread basket could dry up as a result of global warming, to the extent
that it is no longer suitable for traditional rain-fed agriculture --
destroying its existence as an agrarian landscape.
"Ancient rain-fed agriculture enabled the civilizations to thrive in
the Fertile Crescent region," Pinhas Alpert, a professor of atmospheric
sciences at Tel Aviv University, told SPIEGEL ONLINE. "But this
blessing is soon to disappear due to human-induced climate change."
Together with colleagues from Japan, the Israeli physicist simulated
how rainfall patterns and the water flows of major rivers in the region
will change over the 21st century. To do that, they made use of a
climate change model developed by the Meteorological Research Institute
in Tsukuba, Japan. The model is unique in that it allows researchers to
simulate the climate with a spatial resolution of 20 kilometers, a
scale previously unobtained by other global climate models.
The model envisages two possible scenarios for the area's future: a
moderate one, in which the average air temperature in the region climbs
by 2.6 degrees Celsius (4.7 degrees Fahrenheit), compared to the
pre-industrial period, by the end of this century. In the extreme
scenario, temperatures rise by 4.8 degrees Celsius (8.6 degrees
Fahrenheit).
Alpert presented the results of his research at the annual conference of the
European Geosciences Union
in Vienna this week. Even with moderate temperature rises, he stated,
the yearly rainfall rate on the Mediterranean coast -- in Syria, Israel
and Lebanon -- will fall by 50 to 200 millimeters (2 to 7.9 inches).
The Euphrates would carry 30 percent less water than today; in the
Ceyhan River in south Turkey the water flow would shrink by 40 percent
and in the Jordan River by as much as 80 percent.
But, if you take the extreme scenario, water resources will become
even scarcer. According to those predictions, the region between the
Euphrates and Tigris will lose two-thirds of its current levels of
rainfall. The water flow of the Euphrates and Ceyhan will fall by over
70 percent and 80 percent, respectively. The river Jordan will
practically dry up -- it will carry only a measly 2 percent of its
original volume.
The Fertile Crescent and the grain cultivation which takes place
there need a lot of precipitation in the winter, as only then does the
water level in rivers rise sufficiently to last through the dry season,
which runs from spring to fall. "The main season for rainfall is the
winter," Alpert explains. "If you take October to March, you get over
90 percent of the rainfall."
During that time, humid air from the Atlantic comes in from the west
via the Mediterranean. Abundant amounts of snow fall over the Taurus
Mountains in Turkey and the Zagros Mountains in Iran and Iraq, which
rise to well over 4,000 meters, as well as over the Golan Heights. In
spring the snow melts, raising the water levels of rivers. These
rivers, whose waters are diverted on to fields for irrigation, are the
lifelines of the Fertile Crescent.
But because of climate change, the cradle of agriculture is drying
up. Even with only a moderate rise in temperatures, the Fertile
Crescent will shrivel and the land fit for cultivation in the Middle
East will shrink, says Alpert. "And the indications are very, very
problematic to the region," he adds. "We all know that this region is
very fragile ... Most of the governments in this region are very
fragile and (have) very weak economies."
Rich countries, such as Canada and Russia, will benefit from climate
change as parts of their northern areas will become usable as farmland,
Alpert says. However, in poor subtropical countries, where it will get
even drier, farmland will be lost, as will probably soon happen in the
Middle East.
Ominous First Signs
The Israeli climate scientist has great faith in the results of the
new models. He admits that it is the first Middle Eastern study to use
the Japanese climate change model. However previous models failed to
produce accurate simulations of the region because their spatial
resolution was not high enough. "It is the first global simulation with
a supercomputer which was able to really reproduce the shape on the
Fertile Crescent very, very well," he says.
Today, there are already signs of a trend towards greater dryness, for
example in the Jordan River's watershed. There, German researchers are
also creating simulations of the effects of climate change on the water
supply as part of an international research project called Glowa Jordan.
"There is no longer so much snow on the Golan Heights," says Peter
Suppan of the Institute for Meteorology and Climate Research in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany. "And when it melts, the water runs off
far quicker."
As a result, water does not flow out of the mountains in the later
part of the year, the water level of the Jordan River falls
dramatically and it becomes difficult to irrigate fields. According to
Suppan, "the people there don't care if it gets one or two degrees
warmer." Much more important, he says, is what happens to rainfall
levels: "Even a drop of 10 percent could have drastic consequences."
However, Alpert believes the Fertile Crescent can still be saved.
"It depends very much on how the world will react, whether the world
will really take serious action as is needed (against climate change),"
he says.
The new research makes one thing crystal clear. Climate change is
not only threatening to wipe out ice sheets, glaciers and animal
species -- it could also destroy humanity's irreplaceable man-made
landscapes.
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