MONGABAY.COM
Mongabay.com seeks to raise interest in and appreciation of wild lands and wildlife, while examining the impact of emerging trends in climate, technology, economics, and finance on conservation and development (more)
WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
|
|
Iraq
Index
At independence, Iraq had little port capacity, a fact that
reflected the low level of foreign trade and the country's
traditional overland orientation toward Syria and Turkey rather
than toward the Gulf. Since then, the Gulf port of Basra has been
expanded many times, and a newer port was built at Umm Qasr to
relieve pressure on Basra. Oil terminals were located at Khawr al
Amayah, and Mina al Bakr, Al Faw, and a port was built in tandem
with an industrial center at Khawr az Zubayr. Because Iraq's
access to the Gulf was an Iranian target in the Iran-Iraq War,
port activities were curtailed severely in the 1980s. Before
shipping can be resumed after the war, the Shatt al Arab will
have to be cleared of explosives and wreckage, which will take
years.
Despite long-standing government interest in developing the
Tigris and the Euphrates rivers into major arteries for inland
transport, little had been accomplished by the late 1980s,
primarily because of the massive scale of such a project.
Dredging and the establishment of navigation channels had been
completed on several stretches of the Tigris south of Baghdad,
and in 1987 a river freight route using barges was opened between
Baghdad and Al Amarah. Iraq investigated the possibility of
opening the entire Tigris River between Mosul and Baghdad, as
well as the feasibility of opening a stretch of the Euphrates
between Al Hadithah and Al Qurnah, but lack of funds precluded
further action.
Data as of May 1988
|
|