'Cistern wisdom' to tackle water shortage, floods in Türkiye: Ministry
The Basilica Cistern built by the Byzantine emperor Justinian I, Istanbul, Türkiye, Oct. 6, 2022. (Shutterstock Photo)


The Agriculture and Forestry Ministry has reintroduced the cistern system as an alternative solution to combat floods and storing water, a method used centuries ago in response to the increasingly frequent and sometimes deadly floods in certain provinces, which have been exacerbated by irregularities in precipitation patterns due to climate change.

The general directorate of water management of the ministry is developing a project to revive the centuries-old cistern system, originally built for water storage but later fell out of use, with the aim of both preventing floodwaters from reaching residential areas and harnessing the advantages of floodwaters against the risk of drought.

Municipalities will also be tasked with organizing urban infrastructure and implementing underground water reservoirs.

Afire Sever, the head of the water management directorate, stated that it is possible to transform the recent urban floods experienced in many cities, including the capital Ankara, into an advantage.

"We must turn floodwaters into abundance against the risk of drought. Today, we see once again how necessary the cisterns that our ancestors built centuries ago are. There are very successful examples of cisterns in terms of both preventing floods, collecting rainwater and using it for different purposes," Sever explained.

Sever also stressed municipalities should prepare their wastewater and rainwater drainage plans by considering the effects of climate change, adding that this would ensure the rain drainage lines do not cause urban floods.