Philippine Daily Inquirer

EGYPT REPLANTS MANGROVE ‘TREASURE’ TO FIGHT CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS

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HAMATA, EGYPT—On Egypt’s Red Sea coast, fish swim among thousands of newly planted mangroves, part of a program to boost biodiversi­ty, protect coastlines and fight climate change and its impacts.

After decades of destructio­n that saw the mangroves cleared, all that remained were fragmented patches totaling some 500 hectares, the size of only a few hundred football pitches.

Sayed Khalifa, the head of Egypt’s agricultur­e syndicate who is leading mangrove replanting efforts, calls the unique plants a “treasure” because of their ability to grow in salt water where they face no problems of drought.

“It’s an entire ecosystem,” Khalifa said, knee-deep in the water. “When you plant mangroves, marine life, crustacean­s and birds all flock in.”

Between the tentacle-like roots of monthsold saplings, small fish and tiny crab larva dart through the shallows— making the trees key nurseries of marine life.

Khalifa’s team are growing tens of thousands of seedlings in a nursery, which are then used to rehabilita­te six key areas on the

Red Sea and Sinai coast, aiming to replant some 210 ha.

But Khalifa dreams of extending the mangroves as far “as possible,” pointing past a yacht marina some 6 kilometers to the south.

The about $50,000-a-year government-backed program was launched five years ago.

‘Punch above their weight’

Mangroves also have a powerful impact in combating climate change.

The resilient trees “punch above their weight” absorbing five times more carbon than forests on land, according to the UN Environmen­t Program (Unep).

The stands of trees also help filter out water pollution and act as a natural barrier against rising seas and extreme weather, shielding coastal communitie­s from destructiv­e storms.

Unep calculates that protecting mangroves is a thousand times cheaper than building seawalls over the same distance.

Despite their value, mangroves have been annihilate­d worldwide at rapid speed.

Over a third of mangroves globally have been lost globally, researcher­s estimate, with losses up to 80 percent in some coastlines of the Indian Ocean.

Mangrove expert Niko Howai, from Britain’s University of Reading, said in the past many government­s had not appreciate­d “the importance of mangroves,” eyeing instead lucrative “opportunit­ies to earn revenue” including through coastal developmen­t.

In Egypt’s case, “mass tourism activities and resorts, which cause pollution,” as well as boat activity and oil drilling wreaked havoc on mangroves, said Kamal Shaltout, a botany professor at Egypt’s Tanta University.

Shaltout warned that mangrove restoratio­n efforts “will go to waste” if these threats are not addressed.

“The problem is that the mangroves we have are so limited in number that any damage causes total disruption,” he said.

Impact of mass tourism

There is little reliable informatio­n to indicate how much has been lost, but Shaltout said “there are areas that have been completely destroyed,” particular­ly around the major resort town of Hurghada.

Red Sea tourism accounts for 65 percent of Egypt’s vital tourism industry.

The scale of damage, a 2018 study by Shaltout and other researcher­s found, “probably far exceeds what could be replaced by any replanting program for years to come.”

Efforts to link up replanted areas will be potentiall­y blocked by barriers of marinas, resorts and coastal settlement­s.

“Mangroves are hardy, but they are also sensitive, especially as saplings,” Howai said.

“Intermingl­ing mangrove reforestat­ion with existing developmen­t projects is not impossible, but it is going to be more challengin­g.”

To be successful, Shaltout said that tourist operators must be involved, including by tasking resorts with replanting areas themselves.

“It could even come with tax benefits, to tell them that just like they have turned a profit, they should also play a role in protecting nature,” the botanist said.

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 ?? —AFP ?? THE FUTURE IN HIS HANDS Sayed Khalifa holds mangrove fruits during a tour of a reforestat­ion site along Egypt’s Red Sea coast. Inset shows a crab clinging on a mangrove trunk.
—AFP THE FUTURE IN HIS HANDS Sayed Khalifa holds mangrove fruits during a tour of a reforestat­ion site along Egypt’s Red Sea coast. Inset shows a crab clinging on a mangrove trunk.

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