All the experts reassured you.

‘The Aral Sea is nature’s error,’ they said. ‘It should have evaporated long ago. Using its water will be far more advantageous than preserving it.’ 

You studied its immense expanse between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, the fourth largest inland sea in the world, and imagined new desert plantations, and a drained, fertile lake-bed. It would easily counter-balance the loss of forty thousand jobs in the fisheries. Planting and exporting the ‘white gold’ of cotton would bring such wealth it would secure the USSR’s transition to socialism and feed the growing nation. 

In 1918, you spent thirty million roubles diverting the two feeder-rivers, and even though the poorly-built canals wasted over fifty percent of their water you were satisfied. 

But over the decades, the Aral shrank, revealing a polluted seabed. Toxic dust storms blew residues from weapons testing, pesticides and fertilisers across the land. 

Human mortality rose fifteen times, and rates of cancer and lung disease rose thirty times. All the Aral’s fish, half its mammals and three-quarters of its birds became extinct. At the same time, in the desert, the heavily-irrigated plantations raised the water table and turned the soil to salt. 

Today the fishing boats lie beached, out of sight of water, testament to the greatest irrigation disaster in history. 

Aral Sea



Alex Harvie




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