Climate Change—and Complacency—Is Drying Up the Caspian Sea

Climate Change—and Complacency—Is Drying Up the Caspian Sea
Two ships ship lie grounded ashore in the Caspian Sea, north of Makhachkala, Russia, Feb. 1, 2005 (AP Photo by Hadzhimurad Zurgalov).

Editor’s note: Robert Looney passed away on Dec. 19, 2024, while this article was awaiting publication. With the consent of his family, we are publishing it posthumously. Bob was a longtime and well-liked contributor to WPR who was always kind, gracious and a pleasure to work with. He’ll be missed.

The Caspian Sea is a geographical marvel and a critical resource for the five countries—Russia, Iran, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan—that border it. But the future of the world’s largest enclosed inland body of water is highly uncertain. The Caspian is currently exhibiting many of the same symptoms previously experienced by the Aral Sea, which has lost 90 percent of its original size in the past 60 years. Despite the urgency of the problem, however, it is far from certain that the Caspian-bordering countries will reach the levels of cooperation needed for its survival, given their distinct economic and political agendas.

The Caspian Sea’s water levels have decreased an average of 2.75 inches annually since the early 1990s. The Institute of Geography of the Russian Academy of Sciences now estimates the loss rate at 9 inches per year. From 1993 to 2023, the water level dropped by 6 feet, 6 inches in total.

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