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Sinkholes in Turkey’s agricultural heartland cause farmers to be concerned

Sinkholes in Turkey’s agricultural heartland cause farmers to be concerned
Sinkholes in Turkey’s agricultural heartland cause farmers to be concerned

Due to the dwindling rain and receding water levels, hundreds of sinkholes are appearing in Turkey's agricultural central region. This is causing concern among environmentalists and farmers who view it as an?unsettling sign of climate changes.

In Karapinar, Konya, sinkholes are a common sight on farmland that produces?maize?,?wheat? and sugar beet. At times, there can be more than 10 in a single field. Ancient sinkholes in mountainous regions, which were once filled with water, are now mostly dry.

According to Fetullah rik, a professor of geology at Konya Technical University who studies sinkholes, the pace at which they form has increased in recent years. The total is now approaching 700.

Arik explained that the main reasons for the increase are climate change and the?drought which has affected the entire world since 2000. The groundwater level is decreasing every year as a result.

He stated that the rate of groundwater?levels' decline has increased to 4 to 5 metres per year compared to half an metre per annual in the 2000s. This is a cause for concern in Turkey's main agricultural sector.

Local farmers are forced to dig additional wells due to the drought and the receding water table. Many of these wells are not licensed, which further depletes the groundwater.

Arik added that the demand for water in the Konya basin is extremely high. There are approximately 120,000 wells without licenses compared to 40,000 licensed ones.

He said that while the new sinkholes had not yet caused any deaths, they were unpredictable and could endanger the lives of the locals.

In the past two years, Mustafa Sik's farm in Karapinar has been ravaged by sinkholes. Sik's brother was working at the farm, a short distance away, in August 2024, when the second sinkhole appeared with a "terrifying, extremely loud rumbling sound."

Geologists on Sik's Land found two additional areas where sinkholes may form, but it is impossible to predict when they will occur.

"Are we worried? He said, "Of course we are worried." Reporting by Ali Kucukgocmen, Editing by Daren and Alexandra Hudson

(source: Reuters)