Iran's heatwave comes as the country grapples with severe water shortagesImage: Fatemeh Bahrami/Anadolu Agency/IMAGO
Is Iran running out of water?
DW- Aug7th2025
Authorities in Iran ordered many government offices and public institutions in 16 of Iran’s 31 provinces, including Tehran, to remain closed on Wednesday in an attempt to cut power consumption amid an extreme heat wave that has been ongoing since mid-July.
The extreme weather is expected to continue for at least five more days in many parts of the country, according to the meteorological agency, with temperatures forecast to hit 50 degrees Celsius (122 Fahrenheit) in some areas.
The heat wave has been accompanied by drought, with the capital, Tehran, experiencing its lowest rainfall in 60 years, severely impacting the city’s water resources, according to the Tehran Provincial Water and Sewage Corporation.
Water pressure in Tehran’s pipeline network has been reduced to counteract the falling water levels in the city’s reservoirs.
“All rivers and water sources within a 100-kilometer radius of Tehran have been depleted,” according to Nasser Karami, who researches sustainable development, climate change and water management.
“Tehran is not a place where authorities can simply resort to another source when water is scarce,” the Norway-based researcher told DW.
Mismanagement of resources
Tehran city, which is home to more than 9 million people, is located on the northern edge of the central Iranian desert zone. Water scarcity has been a central issue for the city administration since at least 1969.
Building code violations, resource mismanagement and over-consumption have impacted the capital’s drinking water resources, which are only adequate for a limited number of people.
Experts have been warning for decades that Iran — whose population tripled from 28 million in 1969 to 92 million in 2025 — does not have sufficient resources to support its growing number of inhabitants, expanding agriculture needs, or the high water consumption of its industry and households.
“Nature has paid the price for this policy,” said environmental expert Mansour Sohrabi, who has been based in Germany since 2015. “Water shortages, heat waves in cities that have hardly any trees left, sandstorms, and particulate matter pollution are the result of these misguided developments.”
In recent weeks, water has been turned off for up to 48 hours in several Iranian cities. Electricity is also in short supply. The use of air conditioning puts additional strain on the already unstable power grids. With temperatures between 40 and 50 degrees Celsius, power outages lasting hours are a regular occurrence, which is an almost unbearable burden for many people.
Frustrated experts
“We have been warning the authorities in Iran about this situation for 30 years,” said climate researcher Karami. “It was clear that the uncontrolled development of large urban metropolises would lead to precisely this point.
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