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Azerbaijan raises alarm over Caspian Sea's 'disastrous' shrinking

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev on Monday discussed with Russian President Vladimir Putin his issue over what he said was the devastating shrinking of the Caspian Sea, and stated that the two had consented to analyse the situation.

The Caspian Sea, the largest inland body of water in the world, lies between Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan, with Russia to the north and Iran and Turkmenistan to the south.

The Caspian's water levels, which have actually varied dramatically during the last century, have actually been falling since the mid 1990s, clinical studies have actually found.

From the window of the room in which we were working out, I. revealed Vladimir Vladimirovich (Putin) the rocks that were under. water simply two years earlier, Aliyev stated during a statement to the. media next to Putin in Baku.

Today they have already emerged a metre above the surface area.

Putin did not make any public declaration.

Aliyev said that he and Putin had consented to evaluate the. scenario that he said was becoming an ecological. catastrophe.

Nazim Mahmudov, the head of the National Hydrometeorological. Service from the Azeri ecology ministry, informed Reuters the levels. had been affected by increased evaporation related to. climate modification, along with the diversion of the Volga's waters. for watering.

He stated modifications in the level of the Caspian Sea impacted the. environment and financial sectors, significantly marine oil and gas. operations, and advised worldwide efforts to reduce greenhouse gas. emissions.

Baku will host the next United Nations Conference of the.

(source: Reuters)