Water resources management in modern Egypt is a
complex process that involves multiple stakeholders who use water
for irrigation, municipal and industrial water supply, hydropower
generation and navigation. In addition, the waters of the
Nile support aquatic ecosystems that are threatened by
abstraction and pollution.
Egypt
also has
substantial fossil groundwater resources in the Western
Desert.
A key problem of modern water resources management in Egypt is the
imbalance between increasing water demand and limited supply. In
order to ensure future water availability coordination with the
nine upstream Nile riparian countries is essential. The
Nile Basin Initiative provides a forum
for such cooperation. In the 1990s the government launched three
mega-projects to increase irrigation on "new lands".
They are located in
the Toshka
area (the
"New Valley"), on the fringe of the
Western Nile
Delta
, and in the Northern Sinai
.
These projects all require substantial amounts of water that can
only be mobilized through better irrigation efficiency and reuse of
drainage water and treated wastewater on already irrigated "old
lands".
History

Aswan High Dam (NASA satellite
photo)
The history of modern water management in Egypt begins with the
construction of the Old Aswan Dam and barrages on the Nile in the
19th and early 20th century. These structures raised the water
level so that water could be diverted into large irrigation
channels running in parallel to the river.
The water regime of
the river was changed fundamentally in 1970 when the Aswan High Dam
was completed, eliminating the annual Nile
flood. While the dam greatly increased water
availability for Egyptian agriculture, it caused other problems
such as increased erosion of the Nile Delta
. Furthermore, water quality deteriorated
through drainage return flows and discharges of untreated municipal
and industrial wastewater. Beginning in the 1980s wastewater
treatment improved and water quality in the Nile also gradually
improved again. Until 1992 the government decided which crops
farmers had to grow, which allowed it to deliver specific volumes
of water to each canal based on the water needs of the crops. In
1992 a major change occurred when cropping patterns were
liberalized and farmers were free to grow what they wanted. At the
same time the government began to transfer the responsibility for
the management of branch canals to water user associations, a
process also called "irrigation transfer". In the mid-1990s the
government also initiated three mega-projects to expand irrigation
to "new lands" in the desert.
Infrastructure
Existing infrastructure
Water resources management in Egypt depends on a complex set of
infrastructure along the entire length of the river.
The key element of
this infrastructure is the Aswan High Dam
that forms Lake Nasser
. The High Dam protects Egypt from floods,
stores water for year-round irrigation and produces hydro
power.
Downstream of the Aswan Dam, there are seven barrages to increase
the river's water level so that it can flow into first-level
irrigation canals. One of them is the 350km long
Ibrahimiya Canal completed in 1873, the
largest artificial canal in the world.
It branches off the
left bank of the Nile in Assiut
and then
runs parallel to the river. Its discharge is increased by
the
Assiut Barrage completed in 1903.
Other
large barrages exist at Esna
and Naga Hammadi
on the main Nile, as well as the Delta Barrage, the Sefta
Barrage and the Damietta
Barrage on the Damietta branch and the Edfina barrage on the Rosetta branch of the
Nile. Water also flows from the Nile to the
Faiyum
Oasis
through a canal called Bahr Yussef
that dates back to Pharaonic times.
From the
oasis it flows to the Birket Qarun
(Lake Moesis). The Fresh Water Canal runs from Cairo to
Ismailia and the Sweet Water Canal
runs in parallel to the Suez Canal
, enabling navigation and supplying drinking water
to the cities along the Canal. Both canals were completed in
1863. The
Mahmoudiya Canal links
the Nile to Alexandria. Completed in 1820 it used to have an
important role for navigation, but nowadays is used primarily for
irrigation and to supply Alexandria with drinking water.

Delta Barrage
Irrigation canals are classified into principal canals
(
Rayah), main canals (first level canals), branch canals
(second level canals), distribution canals (
Mesqas, or
third level canals) and irrigation ditches (
Merwas). Flow
in the principal and main canals is continuous; in the branch and
distribution canals it is on a rotation basis. However, the
government aims at converting some of the lower-level canals
gradually to continuous flow. Farmers pump water from the
mesqas to irrigate fields (lift: about 0.5-1.5 m). A
Mesqa typically serves an area of 50 to 200
feddan (20 to 80 hectares). In areas where there is
no formal operational structure for proper water distribution, the
tail-end users usually are not getting enough water to maintain
crops. Water user associations have been formed beginning in the
1990s to better distribute water among farmers on a mesqa and to
rationalize pumping, with the aim of reducing water abstraction,
pumping costs and to increase yields.
In 1994 Egypt had approximately 30,000 km of public canals (first
and second level), 17,000 km of public drains, 80,000 km of private
third-level canals (mesqas) and irrigation ditches, 450,000 private
water-lifting devices (
sakias or pumps),
22,000 public water-control structures, and 670 large public
pumping stations for irrigation. Drainage through sub-surface
drains below fields and drainage channels is essential to prevent a
deterioration of crop yields from soil salinization and
waterlogging.
Irrigation Improvement Program
Water savings in agriculture are an important objective of Egypt’s
water strategy to serve a growing population with limited
resources. However, the magnitude of potential water savings in
agriculture and how best to achieve such savings have been a
subject of some debate. While field-level irrigation efficiencies
may be low due to the predominance of flood irrigation, the overall
system efficiency is quite high due to return flows. Water savings
strategies in Egypt therefore do not focus much on water-saving
irrigation technologies such as
sprinkler
or
drip irrigation. Instead they are
based on the observation that when farmers lack control of the
timing and quantities of water supply, they irrigate too soon and
apply too much water.
The feasibility of water savings in Egyptian agriculture was first
assessed through pilot projects under the USAID-supported Egypt
Water Use and Management Project (EWUP) begun in 1977. The pilots
showed that in order to achieve water savings, it was important to
allow farmers to participate more in irrigation management through
water user associations, to provide continuous flow instead of
rotational flow in branch canals, to replace Mesqas, to replace
individual by collective pumping, and to create an irrigation
advisory service. The 1980 "
Strategy for Irrigation Development
in Egypt up to the year 2000" already envisaged the
improvement of control and distribution of irrigation water as a
first phase of the strategy, to be followed by the development of
field irrigation systems and direct pricing of irrigation water
were to be introduced at later stages. Based on the lessons of EWUP
and the irrigation strategy the government set out the National
Irrigation Improvement Program (IIP) in 1984, which was approved by
the National Assembly in 1985. Its implementation began, again with
support from USAID, in eleven pilot areas, beginning with the Serri
Canal with 120,000 feddan (50,400 hectares) in
Minya Governorate. The project replaced
the old low-lying Mesqas either with raised Mesqas, from which
water would flow to the fields via gravity, or with buried
pressurized pipes. By 1998 about 1,100 water user associations had
been formed and systems irrigating 129,000 feddan had been
modernized. The project reduced water losses, improved water
quality at the tail end of
mesqas, made more water
available to farmers at the tail end of canals, saved land due to
the smaller size of the new
mesqas, reduced pumping costs
by more than 50% and increased yields between 5% and 30%.
Building
on this success the concept of farmer participation in irrigation
management was extended to branch canals with the creation of
Branch Canal Water Users Association (BCWUAs) beginning in 1997 in
Qemri, Bahr el Dahram and Balaqtar branch canals (Lower Egypt) and
El Reity canal (Upper Egypt), as well as in Fayoum
.
From 1996 onwards the
World Bank and
Germany's development bank
KfW supported the IIP
with the ultimate objective to increase agricultural production and
income. As part of this project, 2906 water user associations were
created irrigating more than 200 thousand feddan (84,000 hectares)
in the Western Delta (Mahmoudia) and the Northern Delta (Manaifa
and Wasat). However, net revenues increased only by 6-9% due to
reduced pumping costs compared to a target of 30%, so that the
project was rated as "marginally satisfactory" by the World Bank in
2007.
Beginning in 1996 the government also initiated the creation of
drainage user associations (DUAs) to manage drainage canals
collectively. However, these associations remained marginal and
apparently farmers are not interested in organizing themselves in
drainage matters only.
Mega-projects under construction
The
North Sinai
Development Project includes the Al-Salam Canal in front of
Damietta Lock and Dam with the purpose of reclaiming 220 thousand
feddans west of the Suez Canal, of which 180 thousand feddan are
already irrigated. A siphon was built in 1997 under the Suez Canal
to bring water to the Sinai through the
Al-Sheikh Gaber Al-Sabah
Canal to reclaim 400 thousand feddans east of the Suez
Canal.
The
New Valley
Project
(Toshka project) is a system of canals around
Sheikh Zayed Canal, fed from Lake
Nasser through the Mubarak Pumping Station to irrigate 234,000
hectares in the Sahara. The project was begun in 1997, the
pumping station was completed in 2003 and the entire project is
scheduled to be completed before 2020.
The Infrastructure Project for Irrigation Improvement in the West
Delta Region to improve irrigation on 500 thousand feddan,
reclamation of 170 thousand feddan and rehabilitation of
infrastructure serving 250 thousand feddan. The latter will be
implemented through a
public-private partnership.
Water resources
Current resources
.jpg/250px-Nile03(js).jpg)
Dhows on the Nile
Egypt depends for 97% of its water supply on the
Nile. Rainfall is minimal at 18 mm per year,
occuring mainly during autumn and winter time. The 1959 Nile waters
treaty between Egypt and Sudan allocates 55.5 billion cubic meter
of water per year to Egypt, without specifying any allocation for
upstream riparians besides Sudan (18.5 billion cubic meter per
year). There is no water sharing agreement among all ten riparian
countries of the Nile. However, the riparian countries cooperate
through the
Nile Basin
Initiative.
Egypt has
four main groundwater aquifers: the Nile Aquifer, the Nubian Sandstone
Aquifer, the Moghra Aquifer between the West of the Nile Delta and
the Qattara
Depression
, and coastal aquifers on the North-Western
coast. The Nile Aquifer, the Moghra Aquifer and the Coastal
Aquifer are renewable. The
Nubian Sandstone Aquifer
System which contains 150.000 billion m³ of freshwater,
equivalent to almost 3,000 times the annual flow of the Nile, is
non-renewable.
It is shared with Sudan
, Chad
and Libya
.
Egypt’s non-conventional water resources include agricultural
drainage, sea water
desalination,
brackish water desalination and
municipal
wastewater reuse
| Water resources and
Extraction in Egypt |
| Type of Water Resources |
Extraction in billion [m³] per year |
| Nile River |
56.8 |
| Precipitation |
1.8 |
| Renewable Groundwater Extraction |
2.3 |
| Fossil Groundwater Extraction |
1 |
| Wastewater Reuse |
2.9 |
| Agricultural Drainage Reuse |
7.5 |
| Water Desalination |
0.1 |
| Sum |
72.4 |
|
Future resources
It is forecasted that in 2025 the population of Egypt will increase
from about 75 million in 2008 to about 95 million, leading to a
decrease in per capita water availability from 800 to 600 m³ per
year assuming that total water availability remains constant.
Developments in Sudan, Ethiopia or other riparian countries could
reduce water availability to Egypt, for example through increased
abstractions for irrigation.
However, they could also increase water
availability, for example through the draining of swamps such as
the Sudd
where large
amounts of water currently evaporate.
Furthermore,
climate change is likely
to affect water availability to Egypt, although the direction of
change is uncertain. According to Nahla Abou El-Fotouh of the
National Water Research Centre (NWRC) “Some experts say that there
will be water increase with more rainfall from the Ethiopian
plateau, and some say there will be a decrease because of water
evaporation." According to Mohamed al-Raey, a professor of
environmental studies at Alexandria University, some studies
foresee a decline of up to 70 percent in Nile water availability,
while other studies project an increase in Nile water levels by 25
percent.
Seawater
desalination, which already is
used in some resorts on the Red Sea, is also likely to become an
increasingly important source for municipal water supply in coastal
areas of Egypt. For example, in October 2009 the West Delta
Electricity Production Company awarded a contract for a power plant
with a 10,000 m3/day seawater desalination plant near Alexandria.
Brackish water desalination for irrigation may also become more
important.
Impact of sea level rise in the Nile Delta
According to studies quoted by the
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) climate change will lead to the
loss of a "sizable proportion of the northern part of the Nile
delta" to "a combination of inundation and erosion". A 0.5-m rise
in sea level would lead to estimated losses of land, installations,
and tourism of more than US$32.5 billion in the Governorate of
Alexandria alone, cutting off the city of Alexndria from the Delta.
For a 1-m sea-level rise, about 2,000 km2 of land in coastal areas
of the lower Nile delta may be lost to inundation, and 100 km2 may
be lost to erosion. Erosion already increased in the Nile Delta
since the construction of the Aswan High Dam in the 1970s which
trapped much of the Nile sediments. Furthermore, agricultural land
losses will occur as a result of soil salinization. A 1-m rise
would put 20% of the Nile Delta under water. It would displace 8
million people, assuming no protection and existing population
levels. This includes 4 million people in the Nile delta and the
entire population of Alexandria. A rise of 1m would put 20% of the
Nile Delta under water. However, the IPCC expects the sea level to
rise by no more than 59cm in the worst of all considered scenarios
by 2100.
The extent of vulnerability of the Nile delta to increases in sea
level varies. One study estimates that 30% of the Delta and
Alexandria coast is vulnerable, 55% is "invulnerable" and 15% was
artificially protected in 2003. High-risk areas in and near the
Delta include parts of Alexandria, Behaira, Damietta and Port Said
governorates. According to Omran Frihy, a retired coastal
researcher, authorities are spending US$300 million to build
concrete sea walls to protect the beaches of Alexandria. Sand is
being dumped in some areas to replenish dwindling beaches.
According to a report in
The Guardian
senior Egyptian environmental officials do not believe climate
change is real or are convinced the problem is so great that human
intervention is useless.
Water use

Water use allocation in Egypt
The main water-using sector in Egypt is agriculture, followed by
municipal and industrial uses. Total water withdrawal in 2000 was
estimated at 68.3 km3.
Agriculture and reuse of drainage water
Data on agricultural water use in Egypt are not precise and often
contradictory. The total area equipped for irrigation was 3.4
million hectares in 2002; 85 percent of this area is in the Nile
Valley and Delta. Agriculture used about 59 km3 of freshwater in
2000 (86 percent of total use). All drainage water in Upper Egypt,
south of Cairo, flows back into the Nile and the irrigation canals;
this amount is estimated at 4 km3/yr. Drainage water in the Nile
Delta is estimated at 14 km3/yr. As mentioned below about 10
km3/year of drainage water in the Delta that originates from
freshwater is being pumped to the sea. Reuse of drainage water
occurs in three different ways:
- Official reuse through public pumping stations that pump water
from drains to irrigation canals. This accounts for about 4.5
BCM/year in the Delta and 0.9 BCM/year in Upper Egypt and
Faiyoum.
- Unofficial reuse done by farmers themselves when they are short
of canal water. In the Delta alone this has been estimated to be
around 2.8 BCM/year.
- Indirect reuse from drains in Upper Egypt that discharge into
the Nile, amounting to about 4 BCM/year.
Municipal and industrial use
5.3 km3 of water was used for municipal uses (8 percent) and 4.0
km3 by industry (6 percent). It has been estimated that about 3.5
BCM/year of municipal waste water was being discharged into the
Nile and the sea in 2002, out of which only 1.6 BCM/year (about
45%) were treated. Industrial effluents contribute to about 1.3
BCM/yr of waste water being discharged to surface waters, only some
of which is being treated.
See also:
Water
supply and sanitation in Egypt
Other uses
Hydropower. An important use of water in Egypt is
for the production of hydropower. This use is non-consumptive and
is thus available for other uses further downstream. Hydropower
plants exist at the Aswan High Dam (2100 MW), the old Aswan Dam
(270 MW)and power plants at the Esna (90 MW) and Naga Hammadi weirs
(64 MW). Together these plants accounted for 16% of installed
electricity generation capacity in 2004. The share of hydropower in
power generation declines since the hydropower potential is largely
exploited and power demand increases rapdidly.
Navigation. The Nile is also important for
navigation, especially for tourism, which makes it necessary to
maintain a minimum flow of the Nile year-round.
Ecology. Last but not least the Nile River also
has ecological functions that require minimum flows to be
maintained, especially for the brackish lakes in the Delta (see
below under biodiversity).
Discharge to the sea. Drainage water that is too
saline to be used for agriculture is discharged from drainage
canals in the Delta to the sea and the northern lakes via drainage
pump stations. The total amount of drainage water that was pumped
to the sea in 1995/96 has been estimated at 12.4 BCM. This includes
about 2.0 BCM/year of seawater that seeps into the drains in the
Delta.
Environmental aspects
Surface water quality
Water quality in the Nile deteriorates along the course of the
river.
Lake Nasser
has good water quality with only small organic
substanceconcentrations, which makes its water a reference
point for water quality along the river and its branches. According
to reports by the Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency, in 2007
average organic loads in 11 governorates along the Nile remained
below the allowed limit of 6 mg/liter of
biological oxygen demand (BOD).
This is due to the high self-assimilation capacity of the Nile.
However, in the same year
chemical oxygen demand was above the
allowed limit of 10mg/liter in 7 of 11 governorates. The report
does not include data for some governorates on the Nile such as
Monufia and
Sharqia. The average level of
dissolved oxygen was slightly higher than
the allowed minimum of 5 mg/liter in all governorates. The report
by the Environmental Authority only shows averages and does not
indicate the frequency of standards violations.
A detailed study undertaken in 2002 by a research team working for
the Ministry of Water and Irrigation and
USAID
confirms that the water quality of the Nile River was good despite
high organic loads discharged from some of the drains and
industrial activities. Water contamination is worst in drainage
canals (drains), particularly in all drains in the Delta and some
drains in Upper Egypt. The study ranks water pollutants according
to their severity to public health and the environment: Pathogenic
microorganisms are ranked first, followed by organic compounds.
Pesticides and heavy metals are ranked third, while noting that
very little information is available to quantify the magnitude of
the problem.
Salinity is another important water quality issue. Drainage return
flows to the Nile result into an increase in salinity of the water
from 250 mg/l at Aswan to 2,700 ppm at the Delta barrages..
Nitrogen fertilizers whose consumption has doubled between 1980 and
1993 present another source of pollution.
Water hyacinth flourishing at the downstream
of water ways due to increased nutrients lead to clogging of canals
and is combated with mechanical and biological technologies.
Biodiversity
The Northern Lakes of Egypt are important to preserve biodiversity.
From West
to East the lakes in the Nile Delta
are Lake
Mariout
South of Alexandria, Lake
Edku East of Alexandria, Lake Burullus
East of Rosetta and Lake Manzala
between Damietta and Port Said. Another important
Northern Lake is Lake
Bardawil
in Northern
Sinai that is not fed by the Nile. Several hundred thousand
water birds winter in these lakes, including the world’s largest
concentrations of
little gulls and
whiskered terns. Other birds making
their homes in the delta include
grey
herons,
Kentish Plovers,
shovelers and
cormorants. Also found are
egrets and
ibises.
Lake Bardawil
and Lake
Burullus
are
protected wetlands of international importance under the Ramsar Convention. Despite of the
flourishing fish production in Egypt, only 17 species remain as of
1995 out of 47 species in 1948. The
Nile
Perch is one of the more prominent fish species in the Egyptian
Nile.
It
is found in Lake
Nasser
and in Lake Mariout
in the Nile Delta. Other fish found in the
delta include the
Striped mullet and
soles. Other animals found in the delta
include
frogs,
turtles,
tortoises,
mongooses, and the
Nile
monitor.
Lake Manzala
, which used to be a significant source of
inexpensive fish for human consumption in Egypt, has been affected
by pollution and reduced water inflow. In 1985 the lakes
fishery was an open area of 89,000
ha and
employed roughly 17,000 workers. The government drained substantial
portions of the lake in an effort to convert its rich Nile deposits
to farmland. The project was unprofitable: crops did not grow well
in the salty soil and the value of resulting produce was less than
the market value of the fish that the reclaimed land had formerly
yielded. By 2001, Lake Manzala had lost approximately 80 percent of
its former area through the effects of drainage efforts.
Groundwater quality
Groundwater is contaminated from nitrogen and fertilisers (the use
of which has quadrupled between 1960 and 1988) and the impact of
pesticide and herbicide use, the latter being used to control weeds
in canals. Shallow aquifers, in particular in the Nile Delta, are
often heavily contaminated.
Health impact
In villages where the only available water is from irrigation
canals, water is used for domestic purposes and dumped back into
the drains. Villagers drinking polluted water have been affected
with kidney and liver diseases. The northeast Nile Delta region has
a high incident rate of
pancreatic
cancer that is believed to be from high levels of heavy metals
and organchlorine
pesticides found in the
soil and water. Exposure to
cadmium may be
from heavy metals and pesticides found in the water. The water
exceeds the European Community Standards of fecal contamination and
there is a high salinization and saline intrusion in the delta.
Schistosomiasis has been found in
irrigation canals along with benthic
cyanobacteria forming mats. Microbiological
contamination of water includes fecal coliform bacteria pathogens
include
hookworms and other intestinal
helminth eggs.
Legal and institutional framework

The Nile in Cairo, Egypt's capital
city where key institutions responsible for water management in
Egypt are located
Legal framework
There is no single overarching water resources law in Egypt. The
main laws of relevance for water resources management include laws
about irrigation and drainage on the one hand, and laws to protect
the environment on the other hand. Among the irrigation and
drainage laws are:
- Law 12 for the year 1984 for the Irrigation and drainage,
and
- Law 213 for the year 1994 for farmer participation and cost
sharing.
Among the laws and decrees for environmental protection are:
- Law 93 for the year 1962 for the discharge to open streams and
its modifications for the years 1962, 1982, and 1989,
- Law 27 for the year 1978 for the regulation of water resources
and treatment of wastewater,
- Law 48 for the year 1982 Regarding the protection of the River
Nile and waterways from pollution,
- Law 4 for the year 1994 for Environment Protection.
Key institutions
Several ministries are involved in water resources management in
Egypt. The Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation (MWRI) plays
a key role. It is in charge of development and management of water
resources, and operating and maintaining dams, weirs, irrigation
canals and drainage canals. It also monitors water quality. The
Ministry of Agriculture and Land Reclamation (MALR) is involved in
improving agricultural activities and land reclamation, including
water management at the on-farm level. The Ministry of Housing,
Utilities and New Communities (MHUNC) provides water supply and
sanitation services. The Ministry of Health and Population (MoHP),
the Ministry of State for Environmental Affairs (MSEA) and the
Egyptian Environmental Affairs Agency (EEAA), and the Ministry of
Local Development (MoLD) also have specific roles in the
sector.
The important task of water quality monitoring is shared among
MWRI, MoHP and MSEA. Each of the three Ministries has its own
monitoring sites along the Nile and canals. Groundwater quality is
monitored exclusively by MWRI.
To ensure co-ordination among Ministries involved in water
resources there are several committees, including the Supreme
Committee of the Nile, headed by the minister of Water and
Irrigation,the Committee for Land Reclamation and the
Inter-Ministerial Committee on Water Planning. The latter was
established in 1977 as a part of the Master Water Plan
project.
The following authorities operate under MWRI:
- The Egyptian Public Authority for the High Dam and Aswan
Reservoir is responsible for operation of the Aswan High Dam.
- The Egyptian Public Authority for Drainage Projects (EPADP) is
responsible for the construction and maintenance of drains.
- The Egyptian Public Authority for Shore Protection, also called
Shore Protection Authority (SPA), is responsible for the planning
of shore protection activities.
- The National Water Research Center comprises 12 institutes and
is the scientific body of MWRI for all aspects related to water
resources management.
National water planning
The concept of a formal long-term national water resources planning
was introduced in Egypt through foreign technical assistance during
the 1970s. In 1981 a
Master Plan for Water Resources
Development and Use was finalized with the support of
UNDP and the
World Bank.
Rather than being an actual plan, the document aimed at introducing
planning tools such as data bases and flow models that would allow
better planning. In subsequent years a number of events increased
water scarcity. These include a drought in 1979-88; cessation in
1983 of construction works on the
Jonglei Canal in Sudan; and
a revitalization of a land reclamation program, requiring one
billion m3 of additional water each year. These events helped
trigger a greater emphasis on integrated long-term water planning.
In 1990 the government adopted its first national water plan
covering the period until 2000. Under the plan the government
stopped releases of water from Lake Nasser that was only destined
for power generation. It also decided to replace old barrages with
new ones and it launched the National Irrigation Improvement
Program. Furthermore, it aimed to increase the re-use of drainage
water and the use of groundwater. On the demand side, water release
to the sea at times of low water demand in winter for the sole
purpose of maintaining navigation and to regulate sea water
intrusion in the Delta was to be reduced. During the period of the
plan land reclamation was to continue at a rate of 60,000 hectares
per year. The Plan assumed that the Jonglei Canal would be built by
2000.Some elements of the plan were implemented. Others – such as
the Jonglei Canal – did not materialize or were delayed, such as
the Irrigation Improvement Program.
Beginning in 1998 the Dutch government provided technical
assistance to prepare a second national water plan. The
National Water Resources Plan (NWRP) was completed in 2003
with a time horizon until 2017. The plan, which is not publicly
available, is based on four principles: to develop additional
resources, make better use of existing resources, protect public
health and the environment, and improve institutional arrangements.
According to the
FAO the plan includes both
"vertical expansion" through more efficient water use and increased
agricultural productivity and "horizontal expansion" by increasing
the existing agricultural area of 7.8 million feddan (about 3.12
million ha) by an additional 1.4 million feddan (about 560 000 ha).
In June 2005 the Ministry presented an
Integrated Water
Resources Management Plan, which was prepared with technical
assistance from the World Bank, as a "transitional strategy
including further reform interventions" building on the NWRP. The
Plan, which reads more like a World Bank report than a report by
the Egyptian government, includes 39 actions in the fields of
institutional reform and strengthening, policies and legislation,
physical interventions, capacity building, technological and
information systems, water quality, economic and financial
framework, research, raising awareness, monitoring and evaluation
and transboundary cooperation. The physical interventions mentioned
include irrigation improvement and rural sanitation without
mentioning the government's mega-projects that are at the heart of
Egypt's actual water policy.
External cooperation
External cooperation has played an important role in shaping
Egypt's modern water resources management through both investment
financing and technical assistance.
Concerning investment financing, the Soviet Union financed the
Aswan High Dam during the 1960s. After Egypt opened itself to the
West in the 1970s the United States, various European countries and
the World Bank provided major investment financing for water supply
and sanitation and for irrigation and drainage. The Gulf countries
partly partially financed mega-projects to develop new lands for
irrigation in the New Valley (supported by the United Arab
Emirates) and in Northern Sinai (supported by Kuwait an Saudi
Arabia).
Concerning technical assistance, the Netherlands, the World Bank
and UNDP played important roles in supporting successive national
water master plans since the 1980s.
UNDP and NWRC have developed a computer-supported
Decision Support System for Water
Resources, which can produce various climate change scenarios for
the Nile basin and therefore help to improve water resource
planning and management.
See also
Egyptian Public Works
External links
References
- M.N. ALLAM, Department of Irrigation and Drainage Engineering,
Faculty of Engineering, Cairo University: PARTICIPATORY IRRIGATION WATER MANAGEMENT IN EGYPT:REVIEW
AND ANALYSIS, OPTIONS méditerranéennes Series B, n° 48, no date
(probably 2004), accessed on November 15, 2009
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