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Afghanistan

Qosh Tepa Canal

The Qosh Tepa Canal is a canal being built in northern Afghanistan to divert water from the Amu Darya. The main canal is expected to be 285 km long and the overall initiative seeks to convert 550,000 hectares of desert into farmland. The Qosh Tepa Canal begins in Balkh Province and is expected to end in Faryab while passing through Jowzjan.



According to expert estimates based on an analysis of agricultural production in Afghanistan’s northern provinces, the country’s current water withdrawal from the Amu Darya basin amounts to 3–5 km³ per year. Upon completion of the Kosh-Tepa Canal, scheduled for 2028, with a weirless intake on the left bank of the Amu Darya in the Kaldar district of Balkh Province, Afghanistan’s water consumption in the river basin could increase to 9–11 km³ per year.



Selected bibliography

Monographs and brochures

Afghanistan’s Qoshtepa Canal and Water Security in Central Asia / A.C.Kuchins, E.Aidarkhanova, N. Sadid, Z.Barakzai (2024)

M.H. Faizee, A. Forss, M. Klimes, K. Goldie Ryder: Confluence Beyond Borders in a Changing Climate: Dialogue for Cooperation in Central Asia and Afghanistan (2026)

M.H. Faizee, J. Naser Faqiryar, Y. Mohamed, J. Sehring: The Qosh Tepa Canal: Implications for Amu Darya Hydrology and Regional Hydropolitics (2026)

J.N. Faqiryar: Food-Climate Nexus in the North River Basin of Afghanistan: A Case Study of the Qush Tepa National Irrigation Canal (2024)

Impact of the Afghan crisis on the environment, water and energy in Central Asian regions bordering Afghanistan (2023)

A,C. Kuchins, E. Aidarkhanova, N. Sadid, Z. Barakzai: Afghanistan’s Qoshtepa Canal and Water Security in Central Asia (2024)



Papers

D. Abdurazzoqov: The Impact of the Koshtepa Canal in Afghanistan on the Hydropolitics of Central Asia

S. Ahmadzai: The Impacts of Qosh Tepa Canal Development on Afghanistan-Central Asia Relations

C. Busch, A. Gafurov, I. Bobojonov, M. Bekchanov: Impact of the Qush-Tepa canal on the agricultural sector in Uzbekistan

E.L. Crosslin: Monitoring the Qosh Tepa Canal Project: A Geospatial Timeline of Taliban Water Diversion

R. Kabir: Uzbekistan’s Strategic Hedging: Navigating the Geopolitical Costs of Afghanistan’s Qush Tepa Canal

V. Kakhramonov: Future climate resilience strategy for irrigated agriculture in Amu Darya River basin of Uzbekistan amid the Qosh Tepa canal project in Afghanistan

M.S. Keshawarz, J.N. Faqiryar: Qosh Tepa Irrigation Canal and Its Effects on the Water Resources of the Neighboring Countries in Central Asia

N.A. Mujahid, I.M. Qureshi: The Impact of Project Management Practices on the Success of the Qosh Tepa Canal Project: A Qualitative Study

B.Kh. Mushtaq: The Economic Importance and Self-Sufficiency of Qosh Tepa Irrigation Canal

H. Sarbiland, I.U. Stanikzai: Qosh Tepa Canal Impact On Economic Development: Historical Significance And Assessing SDGs 2030 In Afghanistan