Ghab Plain


The Ghab Plain is a fertile depression lying mainly in the al-Suqaylabiyah District in western Syria. The Orontes River, flowing north, enters the Plain near Muhradah, around 25 km north-west of Hama.
The valley was flooded for centuries by the waters of the Orontes River, which rendered it a swamp. The "Ghab project", beginning in the 1950s, drained the valley to make it habitable, arable land, providing an extra of irrigated farmland.
The valley separates the al-Ansariyah mountains in the west from the Zawiyah mountain range and the plateau region to the east. It is long and wide.

Fisheries

Before its drainage, the Ghab was the center of the catfish fisheries of the Orontes valley.

Ghab project

The Ghab project began in 1953 and made the area suitable for agriculture, by deploying new irrigation systems. The system included barrages, canal networks for irrigation and canal networks for drainage. Large barrages were built in Mahardah, Zayzun, Qarqur and other villages. The dam at Mahardah, built in 1961, is high, and long and holds of water. The Zeyzoun Dam, built in 1996, was high and held a maximum of of water; it failed in June 2002, leading to the deaths of 22 people and the displacement of over 2,000 as a large hole opened in the embankment and flooded of the countryside downstream.
Other advantages of the Ghab project were the improvements in the systems of communication through the building of road and rail networks, previously not possible due to the swamps. In addition, malaria decreased because there was no longer stagnant water.

Al-Ruj Plain

Northeast of the Ghab Plain is found another smaller plain, known as al-Ruj Plain. It is located between the Ghab Plain, and Amouk Plain. This is an agriculturally prosperous enclave just west of the town of Idlib. Many ancient archaeological sites are located there.