Kazakhstan said on Monday the northern part of the Aral Sea had nearly doubled in volume since 2008, a rare environmental success story in a region plagued by pollution.
The Aral Sea between Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan was once the fourth-largest lake in the world, before Soviet irrigation projects caused most of it to dry up.
The transformation of the freshwater sea – once 40m deep and spanning 68,000sq km – has been dubbed one of the world’s worst environmental catastrophes.
Since 2008, the volume of water in the northern, smaller part of the sea has “increased by 42% and reached 27 billion cubic metres”, the Central Asian republic’s Water Resources Ministry said.
This was “thanks to the implementation of phase one of the (Northern) Aral Sea conservation project”, the ministry said.