The Citizen (Gauteng)

Egypt erects sand barriers to protect Nile Delta from floods

- Menna A Farouk – Thomson Reuters Foundation

– The flooding had become inevitable. Every winter, amid heavy rains and storms, the Mediterran­ean Sea would rise and spill over into fisherman Aziz Lasheen’s low-lying village in Egypt’s northern governorat­e of Kafr El-Sheikh.

As water poured into the village of Mastroua, it would destroy homes, saturate farmland with saltwater and cover the road Lasheen and others walked to reach their fishing boats.

“As fishermen and farmers, we were scared to go to work as the rising water covered up the shore. The tide was so high,” the 33 year old said.

That meant his income dropped by 70% every winter. “During that time of the year, I used to use my savings to afford my family’s needs,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

But this past winter, Lasheen had no need to break into his savings, after the constructi­on of a series of low-cost natural dikes to keep the surging waters away from his village during more and more violent storms along the Mediterran­ean coast.

Egypt, the host of November’s COP27 United Nations Climate Change Conference, is scaling up efforts to cushion the densely populated Nile Delta against the increasing­ly intense flooding that plagues low-lying areas around the world.

As part of a broader $105 million (about R1.5 billion) coastal management project led by the UN Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), the government is building a system of sand dikes along the shores of the Nile Delta to hold back the sea during stormy weather.

Stretching over nearly 70km, the dike system covers Kafr ElSheikh, Beheira, Dakahlia, Damietta and Port Said – five governorat­es recognised as flooding hotspots.

The aim is to save the homes and livelihood­s of 250 000 Nile Delta residents, said Mohamed Bayoumi, a climate change specialist with UNDP in Egypt.

Launched in 2019, the seven-year project has funding from the Green Climate Fund and the Egyptian ministry of water resources and irrigation.

So far, nearly 70% of the system has been built, Bayoumi said in e-mailed comments. “Without the current coastal protection work, the coastal areas are vulnerable to flooding,” he said.

“The seawater will flood these lands during storms and disrupt farming activities; farmers would lose the season’s crops, which is catastroph­ic for them.”

But some climate experts warn the dikes will only push the problem elsewhere, sending excess water from the protected areas along the Mediterran­ean coast to the rest of the Nile Delta, which fans out between the cities of Alexandria and Port Said.

“Protecting only the lowlands of the Nile Delta will turn them into small islands in the long term and will largely affect nearby lands and communitie­s,” said Abbas Sharaky, professor of geology and water resources at Cairo University. “The whole area should be protected because the whole Nile Delta region is endangered by climate change, not only the lowlands.”

Since the dikes were built near his village, Lasheen said life has returned to normal, with fishermen again making a steady income and farmers back to growing crops such as tomatoes and potatoes. “It is a relief for us now after spending years under stress, struggling to make ends meet,” he said.

As rising temperatur­es cause the world’s ice sheets to melt faster and the ocean to warm and expand, coastal communitie­s face more frequent flooding and harsher storms that drive powerful seawater surges inland, scientists from the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change said in a 2019 report.

Home to about a quarter of Egypt’s population, according to the UNDP, the Nile Delta – known as Egypt’s breadbaske­t – contribute­s about 20% of the country’s gross domestic product through agricultur­e, industry and fishing.

A government report released last year pointed to rising sea levels and flooding among various factors that could cause wheat production in Egypt to drop by 15% and rice production to fall by 11% by 2050.

As it tries to stop that from happening, the government is turning to low-cost dikes designed to look like natural dunes.

Made out of beach sand brought inland, the barriers are planted with reeds and local vegetation to help boost biodiversi­ty and encourage them to grow bigger and stronger by trapping blown sand. In that way, they also help combat erosion, another major factor in increased flooding in the delta, said Jan Dietrich, a project team leader at Danish engineerin­g consultanc­y Niras.

Dietrich heads up another part of the UNDP initiative, Egypt’s integrated coastal zone management plan. The plan, “one of the most extensive of its kind in the world,” he said, involves a range of projects – including a new sea level monitoring system – to address flooding, saltwater intrusion and other problems.

Since the first stage of constructi­on on the Aswan High Dam was completed across the Nile in 1964, less sediment has travelled downriver to naturally fortify the coast, allowing the sea to creep further inland, Dietrich said.

Amid worries the sand barriers could also be vulnerable to erosion, Bayoumi said the Shore Protection Authority will be in charge of maintainin­g the dike system across Egypt.

The water resources and irrigation ministry did not respond to requests for comment.

Without the protection work, coastal areas are vulnerable to flooding

 ?? Picture: UNDP ?? INNOVATION. Sand dikes built across the Nile Delta to protect coastal communitie­s from flooding in Egypt.
Picture: UNDP INNOVATION. Sand dikes built across the Nile Delta to protect coastal communitie­s from flooding in Egypt.

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