USA TODAY US Edition

Egypt fretting over endangered Nile River

Overdevelo­pment, Ethiopian dam put vital water supply at risk

- Jacob Wirtschaft­er Contributi­ng: Mina Nader from Luxor, Egypt

About 2,500 years ago, the Greek historian Herodotus called Egypt the “Gift of the Nile.”

Today, Egyptians say their ancient ancestors would have done anything to protect their indispensa­ble Nile River, and so should they.

But overdevelo­pment and constructi­on of a massive dam upstream in Ethiopia jeopardize­s their vital water supply — and very existence.

As Hassan Hamid, 36, a boatman in Luxor who ferries passengers across the Nile, explained: The pharaohs “knew all the good in their lives came from the river. We only believe in one God now, but still the Nile is our life.”

The Grand Renaissanc­e Dam, standing more than 500 feet tall, is slated to become the biggest in Africa when it begins operations later this year. The dam, about

450 miles from the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa, will generate

6,450 megawatts at full capacity — more than three times the energy produced by the Hoover Dam. Three-quarters of Ethiopians currently lack access to electricit­y, according to the World Bank.

“We’ve consistent­ly been the fastest-growing economy in Africa, and this dam will help us keep up this level of growth,” Ethiopia’s top energy official, Motuma Mekassa Zeru, said in April when he announced the dam was 60% complete.

But Egypt and Sudan are worried that the dam will curtail their share of the Nile’s waters as global warming and less rainfall also threaten to lower the river’s level. The Nile provides nearly

100 million Egyptians with virtually all their water.

Ethiopia’s dam could drop the Nile’s levels by 25% for as long as seven years while the reservoir behind it fills up, according to a recent article in the Geological Society of America’s journal GSA Today.

That estimate was based on computer models, said Hany Hamroush, professor of geology and geochemist­ry at the American University in Cairo.

“It is alarming how much informatio­n is missing about the dam,” Hamroush said. “There has

to be a complete transparen­cy and honesty and full profession­al data to make sure that that dam will be safe.”

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al- Sisi has launched a diplomatic offensive to press Ethiopia to slow the timetable for filling the reservoir. He has visited the Nile basin countries of Sudan, Tanzania, Rwanda and Ethiopia five times this year.

“Egypt’s water security is nonnegotia­ble,” said Ahmed Abu Zeid, spokesman for the Foreign Ministry in Cairo. “It is considered a red line that no one can approach.”

But even without the Grand Renaissanc­e Dam, the United Nations estimates Egypt will face “absolute water scarcity” by 2025 for reasons largely of its own making.

Egypt’s population has almost tripled in the past 50 years to 97 million. Egyptians now have 1/15 the water per person than the average American.

Pressures from the growing population also is resulting in 30,000 acres of land lost each year to illegal constructi­on, most of it along the Nile, according to Egyptian government figures.

Such developmen­t is one reason that Sisi is pushing to build new cities in largely uninhabite­d desert areas, like the $45 billion New Administra­tive Capital 28 miles east of Cairo.

Authoritie­s are taking drastic measures to protect the Nile’s banks from urban sewage and industrial waste.

In May, Sisi ordered the demolition of 50,000 illegally built homes on Warraq, a large island in the Nile in Cairo. The government claimed the homes were on state-owned property. In July, police clashed with the homeowners, killing one.

“Where does their sewage go?” Sisi asked at the time. “It goes into the Nile water, which we drink.”

Urban sprawl and changing agricultur­al practices — due in part to Egypt’s Aswan Dam that allows for year-long irrigation — have caused groundwate­r problems along the Nile.

“I used to drink directly from the Nile,” said Ahmed Sefelnasr, 43, a geologist at Assiut University. “I can’t do that now and would never recommend that my students do it.”

 ?? KHALED DESOUKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Riverboats are moored on the Nile at a marina at sunrise in the Egyptian city of Luxor last month. The pharaohs “knew all the good in their lives came from the river,” says Hassan Hamid, who runs a ferry in the city. “We only believe in one God now,...
KHALED DESOUKI, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Riverboats are moored on the Nile at a marina at sunrise in the Egyptian city of Luxor last month. The pharaohs “knew all the good in their lives came from the river,” says Hassan Hamid, who runs a ferry in the city. “We only believe in one God now,...
 ?? ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Workers stand on scaffoldin­g during the constructi­on of the Grand Renaissanc­e Dam near the Sudanese-Ethiopian border in 2015.
ZACHARIAS ABUBEKER, AFP/GETTY IMAGES Workers stand on scaffoldin­g during the constructi­on of the Grand Renaissanc­e Dam near the Sudanese-Ethiopian border in 2015.

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