Aral Sea, originally a fresh water lake with an area of 67,300 square kilometres is known as a manmade disaster since 1960. Geographically speaking, Aral Sea is situated approximately 600 km east of the Caspian Sea. There used to be more than 1,100 islands separated by lagoons and narrow straits, which gave the sea its name in Kazakh — ‘Aral’ means ‘island’. The rivers Amu and Syr have supplied water to it for centuries until these were diverted by the Soviet authorities for irrigation and industrialisation purposes in Central Asia, as a result of which the Aral Sea began to shrink. By 1991, it had lost more than half of its area.
The erosion of Aral Sea not only caused a large-scale environmental catastrophe but also reduced the supply of fresh water to Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, which shared the water of the Aral Sea. Fishing, flora and fauna also began to diminish. It was in 1999 that the World Bank came up with a plan to gradually restore the supply of water to Aral Sea from Amu and Syr Darya but the plan is far from implemented.
Before 1960, Aral Sea was not only a source of fresh water for Central Asia but also a source of livelihood for thousands of fishermen. In an interesting article written by Rama Sampath Kumar (“Aral Sea: Environmental Tragedy in Central Asia”) published in the September 2002 issue of Economic and Political Weekly, the author writes, “the Aral Sea, a terminal lake fed by two major rivers, the Syrdarya and Amudarya forms a natural border between Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan. In 1960 it was the fourth largest lake in the world: today it is on the verge of deteriorating into a small and dirty waterhole. The destruction of the Aral Sea is an example of how quickly environmental and humanitarian tragedy can threaten a whole region. The destruction of the Aral Sea is a textbook example of unsustainable development.”
How one of the largest fresh water reserves in the world became a symbol of man-made environmental disasters