Revisiting Water Issues in Central Asia: Shifting from Regional Approach to National Solutions
129
However, maintaining the Soviet water distribution
system quickly revealed three main problems.
First, there is no central redistribution of bene-
fits anymore.
During the Soviet time Central Asian
republics were part of one country that regulated not
only the distribution of natural resources, but also
the distribution of their benefits.
The collapse of the
Soviet Union left the newly independent states with
water distribution mechanisms, but with no central
authority able to take over a regulatory role in the
barter system. Negotiations over the exchange of wa-
ter for hydrocarbons regularly broke up while the re-
gional electricity trade declined from 25 GWh (giga-
watt hours) in 1990 to 4 GWh in 2008.
3
The work
on the grid was interrupted several times because of
withdrawals by Turkmenistan, and withdrawals and
returns by Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.
Second, Central Asian countries are now inde-
pendent states and their policies are driven by na-
tional interests and needs that often do not align.
Central Asian states have
growing demands for water
and constantly increase their water use without rene-
gotiating the agreement
4
.
Third, Afghanistan (8% of Amu Darya is formed
on its territory) was excluded from the regional dis-
tribution structures. The Soviet Protocol 566 dated
March 12, 1987 specified the annual amount of wa-
ter use in Central Asia at 61.5 km
3
2.1 km
3
of which
was assumed to go to Afghanistan. That said, the
current rough estimation of Afghanistan’s water de-
mand is of 6.09 km
3
.
5
With the Amu Darya feeding
40% of Afghanistan’s irrigated lands
6
, it is likely that
Afghanistan will increase its water use and claim its
rights
in the years to come, generating new tensions
with other bordering states and thus, compromising
regional cooperation.
Political Will for Regional Cooperation Is Lacking
Regional cooperation over water does not work
because the majority of water initiatives taken in
Central Asia in the 1990s and 2000s reproduced the
Soviet water management approach.
This is the case both at the intra-regional level
and at the level of international donors. At the in-
tra-regional level it is represented by the 1992 Almaty
Agreement, the Interstate Commission for Water
Coordination, and the International Fund for Saving
the
Aral Sea
7
.
Regional water benefit-sharing approach-
es through the establishment of the Central Asian
Water and Energy Consortium were discussed in
1997 and later in 2003, and 2006.
8
However, disagree-
ments with respect to the share in the consortium,
reluctance to compromise, and low level of trust and
regional political competition have hindered the im-
plementation of this project.
9
Regional cooperation remains the overarching
principle for many international donors, working
both at regional and national levels. These interna-
tional projects include
the EU Water Initiative; the
German inspired “Berlin process” aiming to im-
prove regional cooperation in water; UNECE and
3 M. Laruelle and S. Peyrouse, “Regional Organizations in Central Asia: Patterns of Interaction, Dilemmas of Efficiency,”
University of Central Asia’s
Institute of Public Policy and Administration Working Paper No. 10, 2012.
4 K. Wegerich, “Hydrohegemony in the Amudarya Basin,”
Water policy 10, no. 2, IWA Publishing, 2008.
5 K. Wegerich, “The New Great Game: Water Allocation
in post-Soviet Central Asia,”
Georgetown Journal of International Affairs 10, no. 2 (2009):
117–23.
6 A. Nazariy, “BVO “Amudar’ya” o voprosakh vodnoy bezopasnosti v basseyne reki Amudar’ya,” 2013, www.eecca-water.net/file/nazariy-1113.pdf.
7 “Regional Water Intelligence report Central Asia,”
SIWI baseline report, Paper 15, 2010.
8 Y. Sigov, “Vodnoe peremirie. Kak reshit’ vopros razdela vodnykh resursov Tsentral’noy Azii?,”
Delovaya nedelya, April 25, 2008, https://www.ca-
news.info/2008/04/26/22.
9 I. Kirsanov, “Bitva za vodu v Tsentral’noy Azii,”
Fond Nasledie Evrazii, 2006, http://www.fundeh.org/publications/articles/48/
Table 1. Annual Water Withdrawal in Amu Darya by CA Countries in 2011 as Opposed to Allocated Water
Quotas (Km
3
)
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