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  • Five countries in Central Asia are facing an unexpected water and energy crisis.

  • Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

  • That's a lot of Stans, were all once administered by the Soviet Union, and were able to work

  • together peacefully.

  • But today, decades after the collapse of the USSR, these countries are withholding resources,

  • hurting each other, and themselves.

  • So, why is Central Asia dealing with a water and energy crisis?

  • Well, throughout the 20th century and existence of the Soviet Union, neighboring republics

  • were administered by Moscow to share resources.

  • In Central Asia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan were tasked with providing natural

  • gas and electricity as a result of their massive natural reserves.

  • In return, neighboring Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan contributed water.

  • This came from their plentiful reservoirs, and the Amu Darya River.

  • Until 1991, this system kept the entire region satiated with power and water.

  • But in the aftermath of the collapse of the Soviet Union, there was no central government

  • to dictate who would send what to who.

  • For a few years all five were able to work together.

  • But Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Turkmenistan soon realized that they would be able to sell

  • their electricity and gas to other countries, like Afghanistan.

  • In 2009 and 2010, Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan decided to remove themselves from the central

  • Asian electricity grid altogether, to sell those resources outside the region.

  • This forced the water countries, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan, to increase their production

  • to power generators.

  • This turned into a cycle where farms in the energy countries, which depended on the downstream

  • flow, began to fail.

  • This spiral has led to significant changes for all countries involved.

  • With foreign buyers to compete with, and an uncooperative Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan, energy

  • prices have skyrocketed in Central Asia.

  • In fact, massive riots and a revolution in Kyrgyzstan in 2010 unseated their president

  • and allegedly led to hundreds of deaths and reports of mass killings, gang rape and torture.

  • Many blame these riots partially on power failures and high energy prices during the

  • previous winter, which led to many people either paying outrageous prices for heating

  • and light.

  • And while all this is ongoing, the original resources are starting to dry up, complicating

  • the matter even further.

  • As a result of climate change, the flow of water from the Amu Darya river in Tajikistan

  • and Kyrgyzstan is expected to decrease in the next two to three decades by as much as

  • one third.

  • So while those two countries are working hard to supplement their lack of energy by building

  • hydroelectric dams, the most important of which being the massive Rogun Dam, it may

  • ultimately fall short.

  • As long as it is more profitable for these countries to sell outside the circle rather

  • than within it, these woes will likely continue to destabilize both their populations and

  • their governments.

  • One country has already fallen, what happens to the rest remains to be seen.

  • Central Asia is not the only place struggling with vital resources.

  • The region’s neighboring country China has been facing a massive water shortage for years

  • now.

  • So what factors have led to China’s severe water crisis?

  • Find out more in this video.

  • When this launched in 2014, state media promoted it as the cure to the country's water problems,

  • but due to grossly outdated miscalculations of the South's water supply, which has dwindled

  • from climate change and drought, the project has had little effect on the crisis at large.

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Five countries in Central Asia are facing an unexpected water and energy crisis.

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