• العربية
  • فارسی
Brand
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
  • Theme
  • Language
    • العربية
    • فارسی
  • Iran Insight
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • Analysis
  • Special Report
  • Opinion
  • Podcast
All rights reserved for Volant Media UK Limited
volant media logo
ANALYSIS

Iran's real crisis: environmental decay wrought by official neglect

Roozbeh Eskandari
Roozbeh Eskandari

Environmental Researcher

Oct 17, 2025, 15:25 GMT+1Updated: 00:11 GMT+0
Lake Urmia in northwestern Iran, once one of the largest salt water lakes in the world, has all but disappeared
Lake Urmia in northwestern Iran, once one of the largest salt water lakes in the world, has all but disappeared

As the world races to meet the UN’s 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, Iran faces a bleak environmental outlook given the scale of its problems and authorities' record of short-term policymaking.

From vanishing water reserves and dried wetlands to fragile cities, failing infrastructure and a fossil-fuel-dependent economy, decades of reactive decisions have set the country on an unmistakably unsustainable path.

Iran now stands on the brink of “water bankruptcy,” a term describing when consumption far exceeds natural replenishment.

Over-extraction from aquifers, unchecked dam-building, inter-basin transfers, and ill-planned agricultural projects have left more than 500 plains suffering groundwater collapse and land subsidence—what experts call a “silent earthquake.” In some areas, land sinks by more than 20 centimeters a year.

Hundreds of villages across central and eastern Iran now lack safe drinking water, triggering waves of climate-driven migration.

The crisis no longer threatens only agriculture and food security but the country’s social stability and national security.

No climate plan

Iran is among the world’s most climate-vulnerable nations.

Rising temperatures, shrinking snowfall, extended droughts and intensifying dust storms reveal the scale of change, yet the country still lacks a national adaptation plan.

Limited engagement with international scientific bodies, poor climate data and a reactive policy mindset have weakened its ability to respond.

While many countries invest in innovations like smart farming and early-warning systems for floods and droughts, Tehran’s measures remain short-term and unsustainable.

Cities Strained

In five decades, Iran has urbanized at one of the fastest rates globally—without the infrastructure or governance to match.

Tehran, Mashhad, Isfahan and Ahvaz now face toxic air, crumbling public services, decaying neighborhoods, and growing informal settlements.

Municipal priorities lean toward costly showcase projects instead of building resilient, livable cities.

As a result, Iran’s urban quality-of-life indicators remain far below global averages, and its cities are increasingly vulnerable to earthquakes and floods.

Self destruction

Iran’s economy remains tethered to the overuse of natural resources and fossil fuels, eroding efficiency and environmental security.

Agriculture, despite contributing little to GDP, consumes more than 90% of the nation’s water—often to grow water-intensive crops like rice and pistachios in arid zones.

Inefficient subsidies for energy and water encourage overconsumption, soil degradation and aquifer depletion. Heavy reliance on oil and gas fuels pollution and delays a shift toward a green economy.

Unlike many of its neighbors, Iran still lacks a binding strategy for renewable energy—a gap that risks locking the country into technological stagnation and environmental decline.

Governance at the core

At its core, Iran’s crisis stems less from a lack of natural resources than from weak governance and fragmented decision-making.

Years of unscientific, short-term policymaking and exclusion of civil and expert institutions from decision processes have eroded the capacity for sustainable development.

Centralized, project-based management continues to dominate where transparency, public participation and local knowledge could drive meaningful solutions.

Sustainable development is no longer optional. It is vital to Iran’s survival.

Continuing the current course—from vanishing wetlands and land subsidence to air pollution and climate migration—will erode the country’s ecological and human foundations.

Reversing course will demand a new development model—one built on sustainable water management, restored aquifers, reformed crop patterns, national climate adaptation, urban renewal and investment in clean energy.

Yet these are tall orders—and they appear far down the list of priorities for rulers consumed by political rather than ecological survival.

Most Viewed

Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US
1
INSIGHT

Iran diplomacy wobbles as factions compete to avoid looking soft on US

2
ANALYSIS

The politics of pink: how Iran uses cuteness to rebrand violence

3

Scam messages seek crypto for ships’ safe passage through Hormuz, firm warns

4
EXCLUSIVE

Family told missing teen was alive, then received his body 60 days later

5
INSIGHT

Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?

Banner
Banner

Spotlight

  • Diplomacy tolls at Hormuz as conflict returns to its doorstep
    OPINION

    Diplomacy tolls at Hormuz as conflict returns to its doorstep

  • Opposition to US talks grows in Tehran as ceasefire deadline nears
    INSIGHT

    Opposition to US talks grows in Tehran as ceasefire deadline nears

  • Tehran moderates see ‘no deal–no war’ limbo as worst outcome
    INSIGHT

    Tehran moderates see ‘no deal–no war’ limbo as worst outcome

  • The future has been switched off here
    TEHRAN INSIDER

    The future has been switched off here

  • Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown
    VOICES FROM IRAN

    Lights out, then gunfire: Witnesses recount Mashhad protest crackdown

  • Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?
    INSIGHT

    Is Iran entering its Gorbachev moment?

•
•
•

More Stories

Tehran’s ‘Saint Mary’ station: symbol of tolerance or political prop?

Oct 16, 2025, 20:58 GMT+1
•
Maryam Sinaiee

The upcoming opening of Tehran’s new Saint Mary Metro station has sparked both celebration and controversy: hailed by some as a gesture of interfaith harmony and dismissed by others as a hollow publicity stunt to polish Iran’s image abroad.

Located near Saint Sarkis Armenian Church in downtown Tehran, the Saint Mary (Maryam-e Moghaddas) station features large reliefs of Jesus and Mary.

“The station was built to honor Saint Mary and to demonstrate the coexistence of divine religions in Tehran,” Mayor Alireza Zakani posted on X earlier this week.

Conservative media welcomed the move as proof of Iran’s tolerance.

“Respect in Iran for religious and cultural diversity is unparalleled, yet these matters receive no coverage in Western media!” wrote hardline commentator Ehsan Movahedian on X.

The Revolutionary Guards-linked Fars News Agency claimed that “foreign social media users, recalling grim portrayals of Iran and the lives of its minorities in mainstream media, have described such narratives as part of a Western agenda with anti-Iranian motives.”

Others were less impressed.

Journalist Azadeh Mokhtari mocked municipality-run daily Hamshahri, which splashed ‘Global Reactions to Saint Mary Metro’ on its Wednesday front page.

“Global reaction?” Mokhtary quipped on X, “their jaws must have dropped for sure that you built one metro line. And your even bigger act of genius is that you named it Holy Mary?”

Opposition voices were sharper still.

“Why the ‘Mary Metro’? Because the Islamic Republic is desperate,” wrote a user posting as Cyrus the Great. “It’s trying to polish its global image and manipulate Western audiences, especially conservatives and religious figures like Donald Trump.”

“Don’t be fooled,” the user added. “By falling for this propaganda, you’re helping the same dictatorship that has oppressed the people of Iran for decades.”

Christians in Iran: Rights and Restrictions

Iran’s constitution recognizes Zoroastrians, Jews, Armenians, and Assyrian-Chaldeans as religious minorities, granting them limited rights to worship, manage schools, and hold parliamentary seats.

But these protections exclude Muslim-born converts to Christianity.

Existing churches may admit only members of their own communities, and no new churches can be established.

While Christian holidays are officially observed, all activities remain under state supervision.

Apostasy and the Threat of Persecution

Muslim-born converts often worship secretly in “house churches,” risking arrest on charges such as “acting against national security” or “propaganda against the system.”

Missionary activity is banned.

Armenian-born pastor Joseph Shahbazian, accused of leading a house church, was sentenced in 2022 to ten years in Evin Prison.

Courts have also intervened in family cases—including a 2020 ruling in Bushehr ordering a Christian convert couple to surrender their adopted child.

Though executions for apostasy have ceased since 1990, converts such as Yousef Nadarkhani, Mehdi Dibaj, and Hamid Soodmand have faced death sentences in the past.

Apostasy remains prosecutable under Sharia or clerical fatwas, even without explicit codification in Iran’s penal law.

The contrast between Tehran’s public tributes and its private punishments has become a familiar script—one no metro station can disguise.

Iran has not given IAEA access, reports on nuclear sites - WSJ

Oct 16, 2025, 11:57 GMT+1

Iran has not yet provided reports or set inspection dates for damaged nuclear sites under its Cairo access agreement with the International Atomic Energy Agency, Wall Street Journal correspondent reported on Thursday.

“While Iran has not binned or ended discussions with the IAEA on implementing the Cairo access deal, I understand it still hasn’t issued reports or given dates for issuing reports on damaged sites and stockpile. Nor of course permitted access to damaged sites,” Laurence Norman wrote on X. He said IAEA chief Rafael Grossi “is for now being given more space” but continues to press Tehran to advance on these steps.

The comments come as Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization chief Mohammad Eslami said on Wednesday that “no IAEA inspector is currently in the country.” Eslami said only two visits had been allowed since the June airstrikes on Iranian nuclear facilities — to Bushehr and Tehran reactors — both cleared by the Supreme National Security Council.

The Cairo deal, reached in September between Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi and Grossi, was meant to restore limited cooperation after the strikes. It outlined “practical modalities” for monitoring declared nuclear sites, but Iranian officials warned the accord could collapse if UN sanctions were reinstated. Western governments triggered the snapback of those sanctions in late September, citing Iran’s failure to meet its obligations.

Eslami said Iran is not considering leaving the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty but faulted the IAEA for failing to condemn the US and Israeli attacks. “The agency should have condemned the attack on Iran’s nuclear sites, but it did not,” he said, adding that Iran’s cooperation is now governed by a new parliamentary law limiting access.

Norman said the IAEA has so far avoided demanding immediate access to a specific site to prevent a direct refusal by Tehran, “risking a crisis.” He added that Iran “could play its old game of offering something ahead of [the] November IAEA board” but warned that without progress, “we could be running into another significant moment in November.”

Norway jails ex-US embassy guard for spying for Iran and Russia

Oct 16, 2025, 11:25 GMT+1

A Norwegian court has sentenced a former security guard at the US embassy in Oslo to three years and seven months in prison for passing sensitive information to Russian and Iranian intelligence, the court said on Thursday.

The man told investigators he acted to protest US support for Israel’s war in Gaza.

The 28-year-old Norwegian, whose name has not been released, was found guilty of providing floor plans, personal details of embassy staff and their families, and information about activities at the mission between March and November 2024. The court said he received 10,000 euros ($11,700) from Russian intelligence and 0.17 bitcoin from Iranian intelligence in return.

During the trial, the defendant admitted to spying but denied aggravated espionage, saying the material he shared was not classified. He told the court his actions were motivated by opposition to Washington’s support for Israel’s military operations in Gaza.

The verdict comes amid heightened concern in Europe about foreign espionage and influence operations. Britain’s MI5 warned this week that intelligence agencies from China, Russia and Iran are targeting lawmakers to shape policy and collect information.

European authorities have also stepped up investigations into financial and cyber networks linked to Iran. In Germany, media reports said a Berlin businesswoman allegedly helped move Iranian oil revenues through front companies tied to the defense ministry. In Australia, police charged a Sydney man with sending nearly $650,000 to sanctioned Iranian banks.

Western intelligence services say Tehran has expanded its overseas operations in recent years through cyber activity, disinformation campaigns and the recruitment of local agents. Iran denies running espionage networks abroad and says it faces similar accusations meant to isolate it diplomatically.

Iran summons Polish diplomat over London drone display

Oct 16, 2025, 09:34 GMT+1

Iran summoned Poland’s Chargé d’Affaires in Tehran on Thursday to protest Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski's participation in an event in the British Parliament that displayed a downed Iranian-made drone allegedly used by Russia in its war on Ukraine.

The exhibition, organized by the US-based advocacy group United Against Nuclear Iran (UANI), featured a Shahed-136 drone recovered in Ukraine and was intended, according to the group, to highlight Tehran’s role in aiding Moscow’s military campaign. Sikorski attended the event during a visit to London for meetings with British officials.

Earlier that day, Sikorski told reporters that a recent Russian drone incursion into Polish airspace was “tactically stupid and counterproductive,” saying it had only strengthened Western resolve against Moscow. The Polish minister said the drones appeared to have been launched deliberately from Russia and coordinated with Belarus.

Mahmoud Heidari, the Foreign Ministry’s director general for Mediterranean and Eastern European affairs, summoned Polish Chargé d’Affaires Marcin Wilczek and conveyed what he called Tehran’s “strong protest” over the London event. Heidari rejected what he described as “baseless and repetitive accusations” about Iran’s drone program and expressed regret over Sikorski’s involvement.

Iran’s Foreign Ministry said the move to exhibit the drone violated diplomatic norms and repeated politically motivated allegations about Iran’s role in the Ukraine conflict.

Iran denies supplying drones for use in the war, saying it sold a limited number to Russia before the invasion began. Western governments and Ukraine say Shahed-type drones, designed in Iran and now produced in Russia under the name Geran, have become central to Moscow’s air assaults. The Financial Times reported in July that the modified drones have tripled their success rate in hitting targets.

Polish officials have not publicly commented on the summons, but Warsaw has cooperated with UANI and Ukrainian forces in transferring a similar drone to the United States earlier this year for display at a political conference attended by US President Donald Trump.

Pezeshkian blames Iran’s woes on mismanagement, not US pressure

Oct 16, 2025, 09:12 GMT+1

Iran’s economic and social difficulties stem from mismanagement by its own officials rather than from US pressure, President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Thursday.

“We are lying on wealth yet remain poor because of ourselves — the managers, officials, politicians and lawmakers — not America,” Pezeshkian said at a meeting of education managers in the central city of Isfahan. He urged local authorities to depend on people’s capacities instead of waiting for the state to act. “If you rely on the government, nothing will change in fifty years. But if you trust the people, you can achieve anything,” he said.

Pezeshkian said the growing desire among young Iranians to emigrate was troubling and reflected a loss of faith in the country’s future. “Why should our children think about leaving?” he asked. “Going abroad to study and learn is not bad, but believing that they must go and never return is a disaster,” he said. The president urged young people to gain knowledge overseas and bring it back to serve their homeland.

Warning over internal conflict

Iran’s main threat comes from domestic divisions rather than from the United States or Israel, Pezeshkian said. “I am not afraid of America or Israel. I fear our own disputes,” he said. “If we fight each other, we do not need enemies. We destroy ourselves.”

Pezeshkian voiced similar concerns on Wednesday, saying at a cabinet meeting that political infighting was a greater danger than foreign hostility, the state news agency IRNA reported. “I have no serious concern about plots by the United States or others, because their hostility is obvious,” he said. “But I am deeply worried about false divisions and efforts to blacken everything inside the country.”

Hardline lawmakers have opened impeachment moves against four of his cabinet ministers this month in what critics say is an attempt to paralyze his government. Pezeshkian, a relative moderate, has urged cooperation to restore public trust and ease growing hardship under renewed sanctions.