‘Iraq War Had No Major Impact on Environment’
| Sunday May 04, 2003
Maha Akeel, Arab News
Staff JEDDAH, 4 May 2003 — “The environmental effects of the war in
Iraq are significantly less dramatic than those of last war,” Dr.
Osama Qurban, director of the General Administration for Monitoring,
Response and Projections in the Ministry of Meteorology and Environment
Protection, told Arab News. Before the war, countries in the region and environmental
organizations expected a similar disaster to the 1991 war, when huge
amounts of oil leaked in to the sea. “The biggest damage that occurred
this time was from the smoke from the burning of some oil wells and
petroleum swamps, and the ministry has implemented a program to study
the effects of that and make recommendations,” Dr. Qurban said. He said there was no harm in the presence of war ships in the Gulf
“unless there is waste discharge into the water or dumping of
radioactive material and chemicals or any sort of explosion, but we
haven’t received any reports of such things,” he added. “The area
from Khafji to the island of Abu Ali was badly affected” in the 1991
war, Dr. Qurban said, “and there are still areas there after all these
years where there is a layer of oil almost 80 cm in depth.” The Kingdom made sure that the leaked oil did not reach the vital
establishments such as the electricity and water plants and military
bases which are all located to the south of Abu Ali. “Our goal was to
contain all the floating oil and we were successful in most of the
areas,” he said. “However, some areas were too difficult to
reach.” |
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