The 2025 Iran water crisis refers to a sharp worsening of the country's long-standing water management problems, which reached critical levels by mid-2025 (Solar Hijri 1404). Residents in many parts of the country particularly marginalized communities have faced acute water shortages, with some areas experiencing water outages lasting up to three consecutive days. Combined with an extreme heatwave, the crisis has sparked widespread protests, beginning with student-led demonstrations in May and continuing into July and August, with slogans such as "Water, electricity, life â our basic right."
Iran has faced growing challenges related to water scarcity and mismanagement over the past decades. These include excessive demand, shrinking groundwater reserves, declining water quality, and ecological degradation. While Iranian authorities attribute the crisis to climate change, recurrent droughts, and international sanctions, many experts highlight decades of fragmented planning and shortsighted policies as the root causes.
The centralized management paradigm, focusing more on symptom relief than structural reform, has left the country vulnerable. Three key drivers include: rapid population growth and poor spatial distribution, inefficient agricultural practices, and misgovernance driven by unsustainable development ambitions.
In July 2025, Dr. Banafshah Zahraei, a professor of water resources management at the University of Tehran, warned that Iran was approaching a "doomsday scenario." She stated that without urgent action, the country could run out of drinkable water in a matter of weeks.
The widespread water shortages and rolling blackouts triggered mass demonstrations beginning in early May, initially led by university students. These were soon joined by truck drivers, bakers, farmers, retirees, and other social groups. What began as protests over basic necessities rapidly evolved into broader demands for systemic change and the end of theocratic rule.
At university dormitories in Shiraz, Ahvaz, and Tabriz, students faced unsanitary conditions and had to study by candlelight. The protests began at Shahid Beheshti University on 3 May, where slogans such as "Students may die but will never surrender!" echoed previous uprisings. As water and electricity outages crippled campuses, students organized sit-ins and rallies, denouncing the militarization of universities and government failure to provide basic services.
By July, the water crisis had deepened. In some neighborhoods, residents went without running water for three consecutive days amid scorching heat. On 20 and 21 July, hundreds gathered outside the governor's office in Sabzevar, protesting power and water outages.
A protester stated: "In over 40-degree heat, we have no water or electricity. We have children, we have the sick, and yet no one seems to hear us."
On 4 August, residents of Khoshkbijar in Gilan province staged a protest against frequent and prolonged outages. Demonstrators carried signs and chanted slogans such as "Water, electricity, life â our basic right," "We donâÂÂt want incompetent officials," and "Death to inefficiency."