Blaming Climate Change, Turkish Farmers Count the Cost of Drought

Men chat by the shores of partly dried-out waters near Alibeykoy Dam, north of Istanbul, Turkey September 16, 2020. REUTERS/Umit Bektas/File Photo
Men chat by the shores of partly dried-out waters near Alibeykoy Dam, north of Istanbul, Turkey September 16, 2020. REUTERS/Umit Bektas/File Photo
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Blaming Climate Change, Turkish Farmers Count the Cost of Drought

Men chat by the shores of partly dried-out waters near Alibeykoy Dam, north of Istanbul, Turkey September 16, 2020. REUTERS/Umit Bektas/File Photo
Men chat by the shores of partly dried-out waters near Alibeykoy Dam, north of Istanbul, Turkey September 16, 2020. REUTERS/Umit Bektas/File Photo

Rain fell on Bicar Icli's fields in southeastern Turkey for the first time in eight months last week, but he and other farmers are already counting the cost of a drought they blame on climate change.

Icli has not been able to plant his winter wheat crops due to the parched soils. Unless there is more rain in the coming weeks, he fears it will be too late.

"There is a serious problem here in my opinion, there is a much greater risk than in previous years," said Icli, who has been working his fields in Diyarbakir province for five years.

As world leaders prepare to convene in Glasgow on Sunday for the UN COP26 climate summit, Icli's woes highlight the problems facing farmers in Turkey and elsewhere due to extreme weather linked to climate change.

In an effort to limit their financial losses, Suleyman Iskenderoglu said he and other farmers were trying to make savings by skipping on fertilizer, Reuters reported.

"How are we to produce under these conditions?" he said, as he looked over his sun-baked fields.

Besides the lingering drought, Turkey was hit by flash floods in its Black Sea region and massive wildfires in southern regions during the summer.

Environmentalists say climate change and aggressive farming methods have fuelled the risk of water shortages, which surfaced in late 2020 as official data showed water levels at dams had fallen to record lows due to a lack of rainfall.

At Diyarbakir's agricultural chamber, Chairman Abdulsamet Ucaman said farmers had seen their output fall by 60-70% this year from 2020.

"This has surpassed the level of concern, it is turning into a catastrophe," he said.

President Tayyip Erdogan said last week data indicated the country's usable water supplies would keep shrinking.

"Turkey is not a water-rich country," he said. "This data shows that our water potential, which we are already not rich in, will fall more in coming years."

Earlier this month, Ankara became the last member of the G20 major economies to ratify the Paris climate accord.

Icli said he feared action to tackle carbon emissions in line with the agreement would be too late.

"Turkey signed the Paris climate agreement, but what will happen now?" he said. "We destroyed nature ... so I don't see the meaning of the climate accord after that."



Cambridge Dictionary Adds ‘Skibidi’ Among 6,000 New Words

Words popularized by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi" and "delulu" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary. (AFP)
Words popularized by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi" and "delulu" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary. (AFP)
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Cambridge Dictionary Adds ‘Skibidi’ Among 6,000 New Words

Words popularized by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi" and "delulu" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary. (AFP)
Words popularized by Gen Z and Gen Alpha including "skibidi" and "delulu" are among 6,000 new entries to the online edition of the Cambridge Dictionary. (AFP)

What the skibidi is happening to the English language?

"Skibidi" is one of the slang terms popularized by social media that are among more than 6,000 additions this year to the Cambridge Dictionary.

"Internet culture is changing the English language and the effect is fascinating to observe and capture in the dictionary," said Colin McIntosh, lexical program manager at Cambridge Dictionary, the world’s largest online dictionary.

"Skibidi" is a gibberish term coined by the creator of an animated YouTube series and can mean "cool" or "bad" or be used with no real meaning as a joke.

Other planned additions including "tradwife," a contraction of "traditional wife" referring to a married mother who cooks, cleans and posts on social media, and "delulu," a shortening of the word delusional that means "believing things that are not real or true, usually because you choose to."

An increase in remote working since the pandemic has created the new dictionary entry "mouse jiggler," a device or piece of software used to make it seem like you are working when you are not.

Concerns over climate change are behind the addition of "forever chemical," a harmful chemical that remains in the environment for a long time.

Cambridge Dictionary uses the Cambridge English Corpus, a database of more than 2 billion words of written and spoken English, to monitor how new words are used by different people, how often and in what contexts they are used, the company said.

"We only add words where we think they’ll have staying power," McIntosh said.