Category Archives: Egypt

Egypt: new study analyzes options for rural wastewater treatment

Dumping untreated domestic wastewater, Lower Egypt. Photo: World Bank / University of Leeds

While Egypt has made good progress in urban sanitation, access to wastewater treatment in rural areas lags far behind, a recent study [1] showed.

The study analysed the cost-effectiveness of a range of wastewater treatment options in terms of the relative health benefits these are likely to generate for downstream farmers and consumers.

The study, conducted by the University of Leeds, UK, in partnership with the World Bank and the Holding Company for Water and Waste Water, discussed the benefits of differing strategies for wastewater management in Lower Egypt using Quantitative Microbial Risk Analysis (QMRA).

Only 18% of rural households had a sewerage connection in 2008, resulting in widespread discharges of untreated domestic wastewater in agricultural channels.

Simple improvements to existing domestic sanitary facilities could have significant benefits at a relatively low cost. The challenge is to work out what investment strategies make the most sense in terms of service delivery to consumers and farmers, health benefits and cost effectiveness.

The World Bank has been supporting Egypt’s reforms in the water supply and sanitation sector and continues to support improved access to sustainable rural sanitation services in Egypt, given its strong linkages to health and environment.

[1] Evans, B. and Iyer, P., 2012. Estimating relative benefits of differing strategies for management of wastewater in Lower Egypt using quantitative microbial risk analysis (QMRA). Washington, DC, World Bank Water Partnership Program, World Bank. viii, 36 p. Download report

See also a 2011 presentation about the study here

Related web sites:

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Source: Daily News Egypt, 24 Feb 2012

Egyptian Government defending its promises on expanding water supply

In the eyes of the public President Hosni Mubaraks he has failed in keeping promises made when he started his presidential campaign of expanding clean water supply to

Mwamanongu Village water source, Tanzania. &qu...

Image via Wikipedia

villages and communities.

The public mistrust is supported by reports from independent experts explaining why dozen of people from the Baradaa village in Qaliubia a couple of years ago contracted infectious diseases after drinking from contaminated water.

However when the Holding Company for Drinking Water and Sanitation heard about public grievances, his chairman Abdel-Kawi Khalifa,  insisted that the projects were correctly implemented and that their commitment did not decreased over the past five years and that sanitary projects were being completed.

Eng. Hassan Khaled, chairman of the Executive Agency of Drinking Water and Sanitation, also informed that his agency had received LE25 billion to complete water and sanitary projects and that about 111 water and sanitary projects were completed in 2009.

It is obvious that the Government tries to help the ruling party’s in this year’s parliamentary elections.

Related news: Egypt: the threat of a water war over the Nile, Source News , 23 July 2010

Source: The Egyptian Gazette Online, 3 October 2010. By Mohssen Arishie

Egypt – Villagers protest due to lack of water

Dozens of residents of Siliein village in Sinoris, Fayoum blocked a highway that links Fayoum and Lake Qarun by setting fire to tires and branches.

The roadblock followed repeated power outages and severe shortages in drinking water that have plagued residents for the past ten days. Continue reading

Egypt – President orders stepped-up desalination

President Hosni Mubarak has instructed the government to expand its seawater desalination initiatives and step up efforts to discover additional sources of groundwater, Water Resources and Irrigation Minister Mohamed Nasr Eddin Allam said on Thursday.

“The aim is to meet Egypt’s future water needs in light of the decreasing annual per capita water consumption rate to less than 700 cubic meters,” Allam explained, pointing out that this rate could be expected to decline even further as the population increases.

“Our quota of Nile water quota is 55.5 billion cubic meters a year, which was sufficient for Egypt’s 1959 population of 24 million,” he added. “Today, the national population stands at 80 million.”

“The amount of arable land, meanwhile, has risen from six million acres in 1959 to nine million acres today,” the minister said. “And all this requires irrigation.”

Source: Almasryalyoum,

 

23 Aug 2010

The threat of a water war

Nations fight over water, especially when access is threatened. Egypt and Sudan have counted on the abundance of the Nile’s life-giving flow but now upstream nations want to keep more of the abundance for themselves. Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda are asserting their rights to more of the river’s relentless flow. Washington needs to intervene to forestall hostilities between the countries.

A new 2010 Cooperative Framework Agreement, now signed by most of the key upstream abutters, would give all riparian states (including the Congo, where a stream that flows into Lake Tanganyika is the acknowledged Nile source) equal access to the resources of the river. That would give preference to large scale upstream energy and industrial, as well as long-time agricultural and irrigation uses. However Egypt and Sudan have refused to sign the new agreement despite years of discussions. Egypt, which is guaranteed 56 billion of the annual flow of 84 billion cubic meters of Nile water each year, hardly wants to lose even a drop of its allocation. Nor does Sudan, guaranteed 15 billion cubic meters.

Egypt has declared the continued surge of the Nile waters a “red line’’ that affects its “national security.’’ There is discussion in Egypt about the use of air power to threaten upstream offenders, especially if Ethiopia becomes too demanding.

Robert I. Rotberg directs Harvard Kennedy School’s Program on Intrastate Conflict and is president of the World Peace Foundation

Source: Robert I. Rotberg, Boston Globe, 02 Jul 2010

40% of Cairo’s drinking water wasted

Mostafa el-Shimi, a housing ministry project manager, has said that 40 percent of Cairo’s drinking water is wasted either as a result of deteriorating supply networks or bad social habits like using water to wash building stairwells and cars.

“Cairo’s water company produces 6.4 million cubic meters everyday and collects bills for only half this amount,” el-Shimi explained. “The rest is wasted water that the company cannot track.”

Using El-Salam City as an example, el-Shimi said that the area’s water network was built 35 years ago and has not been renovated since then. “The government has only started renovating it to make the network fully operational as of next year,” he said.

A water company official, for his part, said the absence of data on residential versus commercial units in a given building makes the company charge both the same fees, although the latter should be charged more.

He further explained that there is a problem with water meters, as many of them are out of order. When meters are not working, the company charges based on unit averages in previous years. As for public housing projects, each unit is charged according to its square-meter space.

Translated from the Arabic Edition.
Source: Almasryalyoum, 18 jun 2010

Egypt: Irrigation Innovations in the Nile Delta

Egypt depends almost exclusively on the Nile River for its water supply. Of this, 85 percent is used for irrigation. As with the rest of the world, the country’s water demands are ever growing. For Egypt, the solution lies in making better use of the Nile’s existing flows. To do so, the most viable solution is to make the current irrigation system more efficient––while being responsive to farmers’ needs.

In order to address the country’s growing water demands, Egypt has adopted innovate approaches to make better use of the Nile’s existing flows.

In collaboration with the Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation (MWRI), the World Bank, the German aid agency, KfW, and the government of the Netherlands developed the Integrated Irrigation Infrastructure Management Project (IIIMP). The strength of the new approach is that its engineering and institutional innovations complement and reinforce each other. Involving farmer groupings in the management of the new pumping and water control systems means that water gets to the right field at the right time, thus boosting crop yields and farmers’ incomes.

Source: The World Bank, 8 May 2010

Mediterranean water conference ends in failure

Talks aimed at adopting a water management strategy for the Mediterranean failed due to a row between Israel and Arab countries over a reference to the Palestinian territories, participants said.

“Unfortunately we can not reach an agreement,” French secretary of state for European affairs Pierre Lellouche said at the end of the 4th Euro-Mediterranean Ministerial Conference on Water in Barcelona where the body is based.

The conference aimed to reach an agreement on a strategy for managing fresh water in the Mediterranean to ensure equal access to the non-renewable resource and prevent the issue from becoming a source of conflict in the future.

But a reference to “occupied territories” in a proposed draft text prevented the approval of a final accord event though delegates were in agreement on 99 percent of the technical issues related to water management”, said Lellouche.

The head of the body, Jordan’s Ahmad Masa’deh, said he was saddened by the failure to reach an agreement at the conference because it “casts doubt on the future of the Mediterranean Union.”

The union groups all 27 EU member states with countries in North Africa, the Balkans, the Arab world as well as Israel in a bid to foster cooperation in the region.

“My disappointment is matched only by my hope, this structure is irreversible,” said Lellouche, adding the body is a “fundamental project for peace in this region and it has not lost any validity”.

Israeli Infrastructure Minister Uzi Landau rejected responsibility for the failure of the talks and blamed Arab nations instead.

“We wanted to concentrate solely on the problems of water and avoid entering into political themes. But Arab League nations lapsed into pure propaganda and made political declarations against the state of Israel,” he said.

The issue of access to water is of crucial importance for the inhabitants of the Mediterranean basin.
Over 180 million people in the region already lack water and over 60 million people face chronic shortages, according to Mediterranean Union experts.

International organizations say Israel’s water supplies fall short of Palestinian needs, but also that the Palestinians have failed to set up the infrastructure and institutions needed in the water sector.
Source: Daily news Egypt, 14 April , 2010

Middle East: experts say more cooperation needed to face water crisis

Water experts called for greater coordination and sharing of information among Arab countries to tackle the challenge of water scarcity and the threat of climate change.

During a one-day seminar on 30 March 2010 on water security in the Arab world, experts from Jordan, Palestine, Egypt and other countries discussed means to deal with the current water crisis in the Middle East and beyond.

Professor Fayez Abdullah from the University of Jordan warned that climate change could have a profound impact on the region’s water security due to declining levels of rain.

“By the year 2050, North Africa and some parts of Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Syria and Jordan are expected to have rainfall amounts 20 to 25 per cent lower than at present,” he said in a special report presented during the event.

“It seems obvious that climate change in one way or another will take place with significant impact on the water resources situation,” he added.

A paper presented by Ayman Rabi from the Jordan Engineers Association (JEA) highlighted Israel’s policies of targeting water resources in the West Bank and Gaza, which he said was a major contributor to the region’s water problems.

“Israel also allows settlers to contaminate water resources in the West Bank and Gaza. We must help the Palestinians cope with this problem by providing desalination plants and developing a unified water strategy in the Palestinian territories,” he said in the paper.

The seminar’s recommendations included adopting water security as a permanent file for discussion at Arab summits and conducting studies on the impact of decreasing rainfall on the environment.

Experts also called on organisations around the Middle East to look into the impact of recent natural disasters that hit the region, including flash floods in Saudi Arabia and Yemen as well as hurricane Juno which hit Oman in 2007.

Water harvesting during rainy seasons and improvement of infrastructure in impoverished countries with high populations were mentioned as important measures to help reduce the water deficit in these countries.

Recommendations also included the need to establish a joint database of surface and underground water resources and to identify water borders for Arab countries, particularly Jordan, one of the most water impoverished countries in the world.

The Kingdom has been facing chronic water shortages for decades amid a high population growth rate.

Experts at a conference held earlier this month warned that water scarcity compounded by climate change may hinder the Kingdom’s ability to meet its Millennium Development Goals (MDG).

The Ministry of Environment in December 2009 launched a $4.3 million programme to develop the Kingdom’s adaptation to climate change and sustain its MDG achievements.

Experts say natural sources of water such as rain and underground aquifers will not be enough to secure the needs of Jordan’s population of six million.

They said the Red-Dead Canal and the construction of desalination plants represent the ideal solution to ease the impact of water scarcity and enhance water security in the Kingdom.

Source: Mohammad Ben Hussein, Jordan Times / Zawya, 31 Mar 2010

Egypt: fishing in the sewer

Pollution and overfishing have decimated Nile fish stocks.

The vast majority of Egypt’s 80 million inhabitants live along the banks of the Nile. The river, which enters the country near the southern city of Aswan, flows 1,300 kilometres before emptying into the Mediterranean Sea near Alexandria.

“You can drink the Nile near Aswan, but by the time the water reaches Cairo it is heavily polluted,” says Sherif Sadek, a former fisheries official. “Some species could not tolerate the polluted water and are no longer found in the river.”

A report issued by Egypt’s environment ministry in September [2009] identified three main sources of Nile pollution as untreated sewage, agricultural drainage, and industrial effluents. It said the country produces an estimated 12 million cubic metres of wastewater a day, of which a large portion is discharged into the Nile.

“Domestic wastewater collected from approximately 5,000 basins in small remote villages (is) directly discharged into agricultural drains without treatment, in addition to the untreated or secondary treated sewage from sanitation networks of major cities,” the report says.

Agricultural run-off, including an unspecified amount of fertilisers and pesticides, enters the Nile through 75 major drainages, according to the report. Over 100 industrial complexes discharge a total of four billion cubic metres of effluents into the river each year. Other sources of pollution include houseboats and thousands of motorised river vessels.

While authorities who monitor the river insist that pollution levels are within permissible limits, many Egyptians are concerned about the effect of contaminants on the river’s fish.

“The river is basically Egypt’s sewer and I wouldn’t eat anything living in it,” says Mona Radwan, a marketing agent who lives in an upscale Cairo neighbourhood. “Many Egyptians eat fish from the Nile because they are too poor to afford meat or chicken.”

Experts say it is important to differentiate between organic and inorganic pollutants.

“With human waste, the principal concern is parasite and disease cycles, but I don’t think there’s much evidence to show that fish feeding (on sewage) pose a risk to human health, particularly if the fish are cooked properly before they are eaten,” says Malcolm Beveridge of the Malaysia-based WorldFish Centre. “A bigger concern might be industrial and agricultural wastes, especially heavy metals and toxic pesticides.”

Among the highest at risk are the 15,000 fishermen who drink, bathe in, and eat fish from the Nile. Many suffer from kidney problems, skin irritations and bilharzia, a water-borne parasite.

The consensus among fishermen is that the Nile’s fish stocks are declining. Officials, however, insist the river’s productivity is higher than ever. They argue that the perception of a declining fish population is due to the increasing number of fishers competing for resources, and localised pockets of overfishing near urban centres.

Beveridge says the Nile’s fish population declined sharply after completion of the Aswan High Dam in the 1960s, but has rebounded in recent years.

“Studies have shown that fish production collapsed in the second half of the 1960s, because the dam trapped organically rich sediment that the delta, and indeed large areas of the eastern Mediterranean, were dependent upon for fish productivity,” he told IPS.

“But then something very peculiar happened. In the 1980s fish production began to increase again, and today yields are higher than they were before the high dam’s construction.”

A team of U.S. and Egyptian researchers found that the massive dumping of sewage and fertilisers into the river had increased concentrations of nitrogen and phosphorous in the water, stimulating fish growth. In a study published last January in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, they concluded that these anthropogenic nutrients had offset the river’s organic nutrient loss, contributing to a three-fold increase in fish landings over pre- dam levels.

While the research was based on fisheries of the Nile delta’s coastal waters, its conclusions have been extrapolated to the river itself. Artificial nutrient enrichment may have inadvertently reversed declining fish stocks, but the study’s authors warn that pollution is not a solution.

“Some preliminary evidence indicates that increasing nutrient loads may stimulate (fish) landings up to a point, beyond which the fisheries decline due to poor water quality or overfishing,” they say.

Source: Cam McGrath, IPS, 31 Dec 2009