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Countries must cooperate to battle sandstorm threat, say UN, Iran

"Most of our staff have been forced from their homes," the UN chief added in a post on X.
  • According to meteorologists, sand and dust storms are expected to increase in countries most vulnerable to climate change.
  • Iran, co-organizer of the two-day gathering, is one country where such storms are increasingly numerous.

TEHRAN, IRAN – Countries in the Middle East, Africa and Asia must work together to combat sand and dust storms made increasingly severe by climate change, the United Nations and Iran said on Saturday.

“Cooperation is key. I urge you to use your time in Tehran to build partnerships, increase cooperation and commit to practical action,” UN chief Antonio Guterres said in a video broadcast to representatives of around 50 states and 15 organizations.

Opening the International Conference on Combating Sand and Dust Storms, Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi called on countries in the region to create “a fund” to pursue common solutions.

According to meteorologists, sand and dust storms are expected to increase in countries most vulnerable to climate change.

“About two billion tons of dust enters the atmosphere each year, affecting more than 350 million people,” Food and Agriculture Organization Assistant Director-General AbdulHakim Elwaer told the meeting.

The people most affected are “farmers and those whose income depends directly on natural resources”, he said.

Iran, co-organizer of the two-day gathering, is one country where such storms are increasingly numerous, particularly in the southeast desert region of Sistan-Baluchistan where rare wetlands are drying up at an alarming rate.

This has caused diplomatic tensions with neighboring Afghanistan, which Tehran accuses of considerably reducing the volume of water in the Helmand River which flows through both the countries.

To its west, Iran is also cooperating with neighboring Iraq to combat the effects of sand and dust storms.

“Fortunately, we have reached some very good operational stages with Iraq,” Ali Salajegheh, head of Iran’s department of the environment, said at the conference.

He added that “ground and field operations” were due to start in six provinces in both countries.

In his opening address, President Raisi blamed industrialized countries “for many problems, for not taking environmental issues into account and favoring their own economic interests and military development”.