
Poor Soil Management Fuels Sand And Dust Storms Across The Middle East
The Middle East is no stranger to sand and dust storms.
Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, and Saudi Arabia are among the countries hit hardest by this transboundary problem, which costs billions of dollars each year in damages to infrastructure and health systems.
In May, Iran's local media reported severe sand and dust storms in the southeast near the border with Afghanistan, which swept through the area, sent hundreds to the hospital with respiratory illnesses, and disrupted local livelihoods.
'Dust storms happen when strong winds lift loose, dry, and fine soil particles from barren or degraded land surfaces into the atmosphere,' says Nima Shokri, professor of geo-hydroinformatics at the Hamburg University of Technology in Germany.
'Unlike people, dust particles don't require visas to cross international borders- they can travel effortlessly thousands of kilometers from one country to another,' adds Shokri.
The Middle East is naturally prone to strong winds, extreme heat, and arid landscapes—factors that create an ideal environment for sand and dust storms when coupled with climate change.
But decades of poor water management, which have dried up lakes, rivers, and wetlands that once helped contain these storms, have turned sand and dust storms into a pressing challenge for the region, with many consequences.
Food and water insecurity, air pollution, conflict, and forced migration are just a few examples.
Meanwhile, as governments across the Middle East struggle to combat the growing problem of SDS, experts highlight soil degradation as a significant contributing element that demands urgent global attention.
Sand and dust left behind after a storm on dry soil in southeastern Iran's Sistan and Baluchistan ... More Province. Image taken in July 2021. (Photo by Oshida / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AFP).
According to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization, healthy soil is defined as having the ability to perform functions such as retaining water or sustaining plant and animal life. Soil then becomes degraded when it loses vegetation and organic matter, like manure, and is exposed to long periods of drought.
Research indicates that in the Middle East, soil in many parts of the region has been harmed because of the excessive extraction of groundwater for irrigation and farming, as well as climate change.
This mix of problems has caused a big issue for many countries called soil salinization, where water dries up and leaves salt behind, preventing crops from growing.
Scientists say Iran, Saudi Arabia, and Afghanistan are among the nations in the region experiencing the highest salt increases in their soil.
In a part of the world with no shortage of environmental problems, soil degradation poses an added threat to food, water, and the resilience to cope with disasters such as floods and wildfires.
But that's not all that it does.
Pete Smith, a professor of plant and soil science at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland, told me in an interview that poor soil management can also increase the severity of sand and dust storms.
'Failing to retain plant cover on the soil and practices like overgrazing lead to the destabilization of soil, making it easier for particles to be picked up and carried by the wind,' adds Smith.
On the other hand, scientists have discovered that wet and heavy soil is less likely to release dust into the air quickly or in large quantities. This means the drier the land, the worse the dust storms, experts say.
'Dust emissions greatly depend on soil moisture,' says Paolo D'Odorico, a professor of environmental science at the University of California, Berkeley.
Particularly in the Middle East, 'there are a few basins of internal drainage that are drying out and exposing the sediment to the action of wind and consequent dust storms,' D'Odorico adds.
Agricultural land ruined by the relentless onslaught of drifting sand in a village in Iran's ... More southeastern Sistan and Baluchistan Province. Image taken in August 2021. (Photo by Oshida / Middle East Images / Middle East Images via AFP).
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) plan to help nations achieve peace and prosperity by 2030. They include objectives like fighting climate change and making sure everyone has access to clean and safe water.
However, the list does not include the need for well-functioning soil, an essential component of the SDGs that experts say the international community is overlooking.
'It would be naive to think we can achieve any of these goals without giving soil the proper attention it deserves,' says Shokri.
'In the absence of that, the whole foundation of sustainable development will begin to crumble,' he adds.
The World Bank reckons that over 40% of the land in the Middle East has already lost its productivity. As droughts become increasingly severe and temperatures rise, scientists believe that healthier soil can be a key solution for mitigating these problems.
When it comes to sand and dust storms, 'it can certainly reduce the impact and severity for communities," says Smith.
Decision makers 'should definitely discuss it as a tool for tackling climate change, food security, and combating land degradation and desertification,' he adds.
'This is truly the definition of a transboundary issue in need of serious global cooperation,' Shokri adds.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
an hour ago
- Bloomberg
Europe's Blistering Heat Sparks Fires as System Moves Southeast
A severe heat wave continued to blanket Europe on Thursday, straining public services and sparking wildfires as it swept across the continent. While many countries in the west of the region have suffered searing temperatures for weeks, the worst of the heat is shifting toward central and southeastern Europe, with parts of Austria and Serbia bracing for highs of 36C (97F) to 38C.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
$21M coming for flood protection projects in Westchester localities along Blind Brook
Some $21 million will go to flood protection in Westchester localities along Blind Brook, by replacing two undersized bridges and doing other work to guard against extreme weather's effects, Governor Kathy Hochul said Wednesday, June 25. The county will enlarge the Playland Parkway and Oakland Avenue bridges' spans to address problems anticipated from climate change, the governor's office said in a news release. The bridges are expected to allow better flow during heavy rains and alleviate flooding upstream. 'Providing funding and resources to help local governments get shovels in the ground for these projects is a top priority, and we'll continue working together to modernize our infrastructure and provide common sense solutions that best position our communities for the future," Hochul said. The money — part of 2022's $4.2 billion Clean Air, Clean Water and Green Jobs Environmental Bond Act — will support replacing the two county-owned bridges that cross Rye's Blind Brook. The county will also "daylight" — uncover — a channeled part of East Blind Brook in Rye Brook. The project includes creating a properly sized, multistage channel. "This is great news for Westchester County as we all work to plan for future extreme weather events driven by climate change," U.S. Rep. George Latimer, a Westchester Democrat and former county executive, said in the release. "It is critical that we invest in aging infrastructure to meet the current challenges due to rain events and flooding, and plan for future risks." Good to know: Are you ready for a flood? What to know, how to prep for flooding in Lower Hudson Valley Meanwhile, according to the release, the state Department of Environmental Conservation is studying flood-prone Westchester areas at no cost to villages, towns and cities. In addition to Blind Brook, studies of the Bronx and Hutchinson rivers, Mamaroneck and Sheldrake rivers, and Beaver Swamp and Grassy Sprain rivers, have been finished. The release said the DEC is also working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Mamaroneck and other partners in neighboring localities along Long Island Sound to carry out similar projects that aim to protect infrastructure from floods. This article originally appeared on Rockland/Westchester Journal News: Westchester areas to get $21M flood protection funding boost from NY

Yahoo
8 hours ago
- Yahoo
China's north and west on alert after sweeping rains trigger deadly floods
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's north and west braced for flash floods and landslides on Thursday as annual 'Plum Rains' left a trail of destruction and prompted the mobilisation of thousands of rescue workers to pull people from floodwaters. Red alerts were issued tracing the rains as they moved from the southwestern province of Sichuan through the northwestern province of Gansu, and up to the northeastern province of Liaoning. State media said over 1,000 rescue workers were dispatched to the town of Taiping in central China's Henan province on Wednesday, after torrential rains caused a nearby river to burst its banks, killing five people in a flash flood and leaving three others missing. By Thursday morning, some trains into the capital Beijing had been suspended, while one of the capital city's airports saw flight delays and cancellations late on Wednesday and into the early hours. Extreme rainfall and severe flooding, which meteorologists link to climate change, increasingly pose major challenges for policymakers as they threaten to overwhelm ageing flood defences, displace millions and wreak havoc on China's $2.8 trillion agricultural sector. Economic losses from natural disasters exceeded $10 billion last July, when the 'Plum Rains' - named for their timing coinciding with plums ripening along China's Yangtze River during the East Asia monsoon - typically reach their peak. In China's southwestern province of Guangxi, several buildings slid down hillsides over the last two days after their foundations gave way in waterlogged soil, local media reported. In contrast, the national meteorological centre forecast scorching heat along the country's eastern seaboard.