Skip to content
June 25, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • tiktok
MILLENNIUM NEWS 24/7

MILLENNIUM NEWS 24/7

Bridging The Community’s World Wide

  • Home
  • IP TV LIVE
  • U.S.News
  • LOCAL ELECTION
  • State News
    • Alabama
    • Alaska
    • Arizona
    • Arkansas
    • California
    • Colorado
    • Connecticut
    • Delaware
    • Florida
    • Georgia
    • Hawaii
    • Idaho
    • Illinois
    • Indiana
    • Iowa
    • Kansas
    • Kentucky
    • Louisiana
    • Maryland
    • Massachusetts
    • Michigan
    • Maine
    • Minnesota
    • Mississippi
    • Missouri
    • Montana
    • Nebraska
    • Nevada
    • New Hampshire
    • New Jersey
    • New Mexico
    • New York
    • North Carolina
    • North Dakota
    • Oregon
    • Pennsylvania
    • Rhode Island
    • South Carolina
    • South Dakota
    • Tennessee
    • Texas
    • Virginia
    • Washington
    • West Virginia
    • U.S. Virgin Islands
  • Politics
  • World News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Weather
  • Business
  • Health News
  • Urban Cultural Programs
  • ADVERTISEMENT
  • About Us
  • Contact us
Live TV

Climate change is fueling the disappearance of the Aral Sea. It’s taking residents’ livelihoods, too

MUYNAK, Uzbekistan  — Toxic dust storms, anti-government protests, the fall of the Soviet Union — for generations, none of it has deterred Nafisa Bayniyazova and her family from making a living growing melons, pumpkins and tomatoes on farms around the Aral Sea.

Bayniyazova, 50, has spent most of her life near Muynak, in northwestern Uzbekistan, tending the land. Farm life was sometimes difficult but generally reliable and productive. Even while political upheaval from the Soviet Union’s collapse transformed the world around them, the family’s farmland yielded crops, with water steadily flowing through canals coming from the Aral and surrounding rivers.

Now, Bayniyazova and other residents say they’re facing a catastrophe they can’t beat: climate change, which is accelerating the decades-long demise of the Aral, once the lifeblood for the thousands living around it.

The Aral has nearly disappeared. Decades ago, deep blue and filled with fish, it was one of the world’s largest inland bodies of water. It’s shrunk to less than a quarter of its former size.

Much of its early demise is due to human engineering and agricultural projects gone awry, now paired with climate change. Summers are hotter and longer; winters, shorter and bitterly cold. Water is harder to find, experts and residents like Bayniyazova say, with salinity too high for plants to properly grow.

“Everyone goes further in search of water,” Bayniyazova said. “Without water, there’s no life.”

HISTORY AND DEMISE

For decades, the Aral — fed by rivers relying heavily on glacial melt, and intersecting the landlocked countries of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan — held meters-long fish, caught and shipped across the Soviet Union.

The region prospered, and thousands of migrants from across Asia and Europe moved to the Aral’s shores, for jobs popping up everywhere from canning factories to luxury vacation resorts.

Today, the few remaining towns sit quiet along the former seabed of the Aral — technically classified as a lake, due to its lack of a direct outlet to the ocean, though residents and officials call it a sea. Dust storms whip through, and rusted ships sit in the desert.

The shrinking Aral Sea is visible in satellite images from NASA

In the 1920s, the Soviet government began to drain the sea for irrigation of cotton and other cash crops. By the 1960s, it shrunk by half; those crops thrived. By 1987, the Aral’s level was so low it split into two bodies of water: the northern and southern seas, in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, respectively.

The United Nations Development Program calls the destruction of the Aral Sea “the most staggering disaster of the 20th century.” It points to the Aral’s demise as the cause of land degradation and desertification, drinking water shortages, malnutrition, and deteriorating health conditions.National governments, international aid organizations and local groups have tried — with varying degrees of effort and success —to save the sea. Efforts range from planting bushes for slowing the encroaching dunes to building multimillion-dollar dams.But experts say climate change has only accelerated the death of the Aral, and will continue to exacerbate residents’ suffering.

About Author

Habib Habib

See author's posts

Post navigation

Previous Studies cited in case over abortion pill are retracted due to flaws and conflicts of interest
Next Google’s Gemini AI app to land on phones, making it easier for people to connect to a digital brain

Related Stories

Study says it’s likely a warmer world made deadly Dubai downpours heavier

Study says it’s likely a warmer world made deadly Dubai downpours heavier

Global plastic pollution treaty talks hit critical stage in Canada

Global plastic pollution treaty talks hit critical stage in Canada

Children of Flint water crisis make change as young environmental and health activists

Children of Flint water crisis make change as young environmental and health activists

Entertainment

Prada Collaborates with NASA on Designing Advanced Lunar Mission Spacesuits 1

Prada Collaborates with NASA on Designing Advanced Lunar Mission Spacesuits

Clive Davis helped launch or shape the careers of these music stars, across genres and decades 2

Clive Davis helped launch or shape the careers of these music stars, across genres and decades

Thousands of Kites Soar Over Denmark at Annual Beach Festival 3

Thousands of Kites Soar Over Denmark at Annual Beach Festival

Oliver Tree, the eccentric American musician and comedian, dies at 32 in helicopter crash in Brazil 4

Oliver Tree, the eccentric American musician and comedian, dies at 32 in helicopter crash in Brazil

New York City Welcomes the Summer Solstice with Times Square Yoga 5

New York City Welcomes the Summer Solstice with Times Square Yoga

Giant Lionel Messi Portrait Carved Into Philippine Beach for World Cup 6

Giant Lionel Messi Portrait Carved Into Philippine Beach for World Cup

Movie Review: In ‘Toy Story 5,’ it’s (digital) apocalypse now for toys 7

Movie Review: In ‘Toy Story 5,’ it’s (digital) apocalypse now for toys

Top News

Thousands Feared Dead as Twin Earthquakes Devastate Venezuela

Thousands Feared Dead as Twin Earthquakes Devastate Venezuela

Migrants Endure Deadly Paris Heatwave Amid Lack of Shelter and Aid

Migrants Endure Deadly Paris Heatwave Amid Lack of Shelter and Aid

Iranians Mark First Ashura After Khamenei’s Death Amid US-Iran Conflict

Iranians Mark First Ashura After Khamenei’s Death Amid US-Iran Conflict

Venezuela Earthquakes: Tremors of Magnitude 7.5 and 7.2 Shake Caracas and Surrounding Areas

Venezuela Earthquakes: Tremors of Magnitude 7.5 and 7.2 Shake Caracas and Surrounding Areas

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • tiktok
Editor: Nur M Tofader, Office: 250 Park Avenue, 7th Floor, New York, NY 10177 & Tell: 718 893 0002 (Office), 7188441300, +1212 401 6266, e-mail: Info@millenniuamtv24.com, e-mail: Info@millenniuamnews24.com, Copyright © Millennium News 24/7 | DarkNews by AF themes.