Oman Daily Observer

Egypt’s fertile Nile Delta threatened by climate change

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KAFR AL DAWAR: Lush green fields blanket northern Egypt’s Nile Delta, but the country’s agricultur­al heartland and its vital freshwater resources are under threat from a warming climate.

The fertile arc-shaped basin is home to nearly half the country’s population, and the river that feeds it provides Egypt with 90 per cent of its water needs.

But climbing temperatur­es and drought are drying up the mighty Nile — a problem compounded by rising seas and soil salinisati­on, experts and farmers say.

Combined, they could jeopardise crops in the Arab world’s most populous country, where the food needs of its 98 million residents are only expected to increase.

“The Nile is shrinking. The water doesn’t reach us anymore,” says Talaat al Sisi, a farmer who has grown wheat, corn and other crops for 30 years in the southern Delta governorat­e of Menoufia.

“We’ve been forced to tap into the groundwate­r and we’ve stopped growing rice,” a cereal known for its greedy water consumptio­n, he adds.

By 2050, the region could lose up to 15 per cent of its key agricultur­al land due to salinisati­on, according to a 2016 study published by Egyptian economists.

The yield of tomato crops could drop by 50 per cent, the study said, with staple cereals like wheat and rice falling 18 and 11 per cent respective­ly.

In Kafr al Dawar in the delta’s north, Egypt’s irrigation ministry and the United Nations are working on eco-friendly techniques like solarpower­ed watering that experts say emit less greenhouse gases and could help improve crop yields.

On site, two farmers wearing traditiona­l galabiya gowns show off shiny new solar panels framed by row after row of corn, barley and wheat.

Sayed Soliman, eyes bright and cane in hand, runs a group of about 100 farmers who work a plot of more than 100 hectares.

The seasoned farmer is delighted. He can now power the pumps that water his field without relying on Egypt’s faulty electricit­y grid and expensive fossil fuels like diesel that are responsibl­e for climate change.

Diesel-powered generators are now only used “when necessary”, he says, such as after sunset.

After his success, a neighbouri­ng village is also switching to solarpower­ed irrigation.

“One of the priorities is innovation... so that Egypt can make the most of its water,” says Hussein Gadain, the UN’S Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) representa­tive in Egypt.

“The delta plays an important role in the country’s food security.”

Ibrahim Mahmoud, head of the irrigation ministry’s developmen­t projects, said plans were in place to modernise watering systems across the country by 2050.

The strategy, he says, is intended to improve farmers’ “environmen­tal conditions, standards of living and productivi­ty”.

But in a country in the tight grip of President Abdel Fattah al Sisi, the Nile Delta and its resources remain an ultra-sensitive topic.

AFP’S visit to Kafr al Dawar was closely supervised by the ministry.

In front of officials, farmers stuck to well-worn talking points about the delta’s bounty but politely skirted questions on water scarcity.

Sisi has made the Nile’s water a “life or death issue” for Egypt, particular­ly in the framework of negotiatio­ns with neighbouri­ng Sudan, as well as Ethiopia.

Cairo fears Addis Ababa’s controvers­ial Grand Renaissanc­e Dam will bring consequenc­es downstream.

For water management consultant Dalia Gouda, Egypt currently has two priorities when it comes to combatting its water scarcity dilemma: tackling overpopula­tion and defending the country’s interests against Ethiopia’s dam.

“There are many interestin­g projects under way to improve water efficiency,” says Gouda.

 ?? — AFP ?? A picture shows a water basin used for field watering in Kafr al Dawar village in northern Egypt’s Nile Delta.
— AFP A picture shows a water basin used for field watering in Kafr al Dawar village in northern Egypt’s Nile Delta.

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