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  • Future Water Wars - Nile River

    In a few years, South Asia (India) and near South Asia (Pakistan), and Central Asia are potential candidates as glaciers in the Himalayas recede. Meanwhile, the Nile basin is heating up right now.

    Gwynne Dyer: Is a water war on the horizon over the Nile River?

    By Gwynne Dyer

    After he signed the Egyptian-Israeli peace treaty in 1979, Egyptian president Anwar Sadat said: “The only matter that could take Egypt to war again is water.” Well, the world kept turning, and now a potential war over water is creeping onto Egypt’s agenda.

    Egypt is the economic and cultural superpower of the Arab world. Its 78 million people account for almost a third of the world’s Arabic-speaking population. But 99 percent of it is open desert, and if it were not for the Nile River running through that desert, Egypt’s population would not be any bigger than Libya’s (5 million). So Cairo takes a dim view of anything that might diminish the flow of that river.

    Back in 1929, when the British Empire controlled Egypt, Sudan, and most of the countries farther upstream in East Africa, it sponsored an agreement giving Cairo the right to veto any developments upstream that would decrease the amount of water in the Nile. The rationale at the time was that the upstream countries had ample rainfall, whereas Egypt and Sudan (at the time ruled as one country) depended totally on the Nile’s waters.

    Thirty years later, in 1959, when Egypt and Sudan were already independent but all of the upstream states except Ethiopia were still colonies, Egypt and Sudan signed another agreement that left only 10 percent of the Nile’s water to the seven upstream countries while giving Egypt almost 80 percent and Sudan the rest. The argument was still the same: the countries further upstream had rainfall, while it hardly ever rains in Egypt or Sudan.

    Now the upstream countries that got almost no water in that deal are rejecting it. Thirteen years ago, they persuaded Egypt and Sudan to start talks on the river, but they have now concluded that the two Arab countries really only joined the talks to prevent any new deal. So they are now going ahead without them.

    Uganda, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Ethiopia signed an agreement on May 14 to seek more water from the Nile. Kenya signed last week, and the Congo and Burundi are expected to do so soon. Kenya’s minister of water resources, Charity Ngilu, described the 1929 treaty as “obsolete and timeworn” and said that Egypt and Sudan had “no choice” but to negotiate a reallocation of the Nile’s waters.

    The Egyptian government replied that the new agreement “is in no way binding on Egypt from a legal perspective” and that “Egypt will not join or sign any agreement that affects its share.”
    It’s an understandable perspective, since Cairo must figure out how to feed not 78 million but 95 million Egyptians in only 15 years’ time.

    But it is a perspective that gets little sympathy in Addis Ababa, which must feed 91 million Ethiopians now but will have to find food for 140 million 15 years from now.

    All the countries in East Africa and the Horn of Africa have far higher population-growth rates than Egypt, and they are getting worried about how to feed their people. So they want to use some of the Nile’s water for irrigation projects for their own.

    Ethiopia, whose rivers provide 85 percent of the water that eventually reaches Egypt, is especially militant. As Ethiopian president Meles Zenawi said earlier this year: “The current regime cannot be sustained. It’s being sustained because of the diplomatic clout of Egypt. There will come a time when the people of East Africa and Ethiopia will become too desperate to care about these diplomatic niceties. Then, they are going to act.”

    Predictions of “water wars” are commonplace, and yet they hardly ever happen: it’s almost always cheaper to cut a deal and share the water. But the Nile basin contains 400 million people today, and Egypt and Sudan, with only 120 million people, are using almost all of its water.

    In 15 years’ time, there will be almost 800 million people in the Nile basin, and only 150 million of them will be Egyptians and Sudanese. It is very hard to believe that the latter two countries will still be able to keep 90 percent of the river’s water for their own use. On the other hand, how do they survive without it?

    In the past, Egypt has safeguarded its share by threats of military action. Since it was in an entirely different military league from the countries to the south, those threats had some substance. But now the military disparities are less impressive, and Egypt’s options have narrowed dramatically.

    As Zenawi said recently: “I think it is an open secret that the Egyptians have troops that are specialized in jungle warfare. Egypt is not known for its jungles. So if these troops are trained in jungle warfare, they are probably trained to fight in the jungles of the East African countries.

    “From time to time, Egyptian presidents have threatened countries with military action if they move. While I cannot completely discount the sabre-rattling, I do not think it is a feasible option. If Egypt were to plan to stop Ethiopia from utilizing the Nile waters, it would have to occupy Ethiopia, and no country on Earth has done that in the past.”

    Gwynne Dyer is a London-based independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

    http://www.straight.com/article-3255...ver-nile-river
    Last edited by World Traveler; July 31, 2010, 04:20 PM. Reason: fix line spacing

  • #2
    Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

    What about building a few more Aswan Dams along the Nile River? Thus, think BIG. And the Russians who built the Aswan Dam for the people of Egypt were engineers who thought BIG.

    Obviously, there is a natural limit to population growth on Earth, but engineering can still improve the lot of mankind now.

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    • #3
      Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

      While Egypt possesses a military that is theoretically far superior to that of a combined East Africa, the ability to PROJECT and MAINTAIN it is a completely different story.

      But discounting Egyptian military adventurism, while unlikely to be successful longterm, may be unwise when you look at Egypt's history with Yemen and it's border conflicts with Libya.....which are far less known military episodes than Egypt's military history with Israel.

      Egyptian military operations to interdict/deny East African nations the use of Nile resources over the 4000 miles of it's length would be politically, militarily, socially, ethically, and morally untenable. Attempting to do so just from the military angle would absorb the entire Egyptian military, and it could be countered easily, cheaply, and effectively. I would rate Egyptian military success at approximately 0%.

      I would think Egypt will instead leverage it's relationship with the US and possibly Israel(say providing REAL security to it's border and actually interdicting insurgent related smuggling ops) to keep it's unsustainable "cut" of Nile resources flowing as long as possible.

      With AFRICOM standing to, and a good chance it MAY be headquartered in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia......US involvement(both directly and indirectly) in Nile water rights disputes will likely increase.....and potentially place the US in a compromising situation.....trying to balance it's long-term existing relationship with Egypt...with more recent, growing relationships with nations like Ethiopia...which recently played a VERY considerable, but fairly media quiet role in counter-terrorism operations targeting Somalia.

      At the same time, one only needs to look at the flight origination/destination boards in East African airports to see that China is a significant player in East Africa via it's long-term ally Tanzania and it's significant trade partner and sponsoring superpower in Sudan.

      I could easily see China shrewdly financing a gigantic public works project in Sudan.....I'm pretty sure I've read a staggering chunk of Nile volume is lost to evaporation in swamps in Souther Sudan....IF they can be dredged....then China can exchange the water of life for the energy of life.

      It has potential to get VERY ugly in the decades moving forward........I believe with the very real possibility of a significant famine in the region moving forward largely due to continued mass deforestation(Mau Forest in Kenya due to pasturalists is but one example)......but I suspect the nations that will suffer the most will be those with the least political capital/superpower sponsorship(meaning those nations which lack a strategic location and/or resources).

      I think it's fairly obvious we will see a repeat-ish episode of colonialism in "Africa, the Last Great Prize Redux".

      Maybe it will be called New Colonialism, like what the Poms did with New Labour and corporates did with New Coke.

      Just my 0.02c

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      • #4
        Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

        Should ge4t interesting. I was in Egypt last November - did a 21 day archaeological tour. We started in Cairo/Nile delta, took a bus to 4 Shara oases, drove to Luxor, got on a Nile Cruise boat at Luxor, cruised for 3 days, finished up at Aswan, and flew back to Cairo.

        One thing I didn't truly realize before going there is how DRY and how much of a desert most of Egypt is. We spent days on a bus in the Sahara Desert going from oasis to oasis. And along the Nile, as seen from cruise boat, there is mostly maybe 200-500 feet of arable land along the river...you can see the desert beyond the fields from the cruise boat.

        On another trip in 2005 (with a non-profit), I was in far northern Kenya, near Marsabit (near Ethiopian border). Again, it is very DRY there. It's considered part of the Sahel, the dry region bordering the Sahara. Local tribal folk cannot grow anything, so they herd animals. They complained that water and rain is a much bigger problem than 20-30 years ago. It's an extremely difficult life - during the frequent droughts the animals die and the people barely survive.

        I'm hoping to go to Ethiopia in 2011, so I may have a trip report from there next year.

        Meanwhile, this is a VERY big problem. Egyptians are relatively affluent compared to the average folks in northern Kenya and Ethiopia. No one in Egypt goes hungry, since food prices are subsidized by government (per our Egyptian guide).

        Don't know if this problem will be solved in an equitable manner - I certainly hope so. Right now it is clear that Ethiopia and northern Kenya (among other countries) need more water from a finite source. If more is not done for folks south of Egypt and Sudan, it will not end well - there will be either major famines or local wars.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

          One can build a dam on the Nile, anywhere along the Nile, in any country, and have plenty of water for the near future. Doing it takes foresight, investment, hard labour, determination, and engineering.

          On the Colorado River, a relatively small river with far less water flow than the Nile River, there are six major dams: Glenn Canyon Dam and Lake Powell, Hoover Dam and Lake Mead, and Parker Dam and Lake Havasu, Davis Dam, Imperial Dam, and Laguna Dam. These projects took planning, investment, hard labour, and engineering.

          The world should no longer accept excuses coming from Africa about not building water projects to compliment the Aswan Dam. Certainly, drought and 19th Century colonialism are no longer valid excuses for anything in Africa.

          To-day, 300,000,000 cubic metres of fresh water per day from the Nile River are being dumped into the Mediterranean Sea, unused for anything more than sewage disposal and Nile Delta preservation.... Compare that three-hundred million cubic metres of water per day dumped into the sea from the Nile River to the near zero figure dumped into the sea from the Colorado River.
          Last edited by Starving Steve; July 31, 2010, 10:00 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

            I did see the Nile delta around and to north of Cairo. It is LUSH with irrigated fields that go for miles and miles in every direction, fields far from the actual Nile River itself, that get their water via canals from the Nile River.

            Egypt would react strongly if the river flow was decreased and/or damned and the farming in the Nile delta negatively impacted. It would seriously hinder Egypt's ability to feed its people. Egypt depends on a strong river flow and lots of river water for its major farming region, the delta. Egypt is not rich enough to replace local farm production with imports.

            The Colorado River damns and the Chinese Three Gorges damn were done within the boundry of a single country, that is key.

            Not so with the Nile - there are national borders and several countries involved. Until those national borders disappear (unlikely), this is a much more difficult situation, as the article points out.

            In an ideal world, intelligent engineering and co-operative endeavors across borders would triumph, but that's not how it usually works in the real world. Everyone fights for their own self-interest, until circumstances force a compromise (due to enlightend leadership, a devastating war, a major famine that brings all parties to the table, international pressure from other nations to get this thing solved, etc., etc.)

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

              Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
              One can build a dam on the Nile, anywhere along the Nile, in any country, and have plenty of water for the near future.
              And *that* is exactly the problem. The *near* future.

              In the event of a drought, Egypt would be on the very short end of the stick -- and they know it.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                Originally posted by World Traveler View Post
                Should ge4t interesting. I was in Egypt last November - did a 21 day archaeological tour. We started in Cairo/Nile delta, took a bus to 4 Shara oases, drove to Luxor, got on a Nile Cruise boat at Luxor, cruised for 3 days, finished up at Aswan, and flew back to Cairo.

                One thing I didn't truly realize before going there is how DRY and how much of a desert most of Egypt is. We spent days on a bus in the Sahara Desert going from oasis to oasis. And along the Nile, as seen from cruise boat, there is mostly maybe 200-500 feet of arable land along the river...you can see the desert beyond the fields from the cruise boat.

                On another trip in 2005 (with a non-profit), I was in far northern Kenya, near Marsabit (near Ethiopian border). Again, it is very DRY there. It's considered part of the Sahel, the dry region bordering the Sahara. Local tribal folk cannot grow anything, so they herd animals. They complained that water and rain is a much bigger problem than 20-30 years ago. It's an extremely difficult life - during the frequent droughts the animals die and the people barely survive.

                I'm hoping to go to Ethiopia in 2011, so I may have a trip report from there next year.

                Meanwhile, this is a VERY big problem. Egyptians are relatively affluent compared to the average folks in northern Kenya and Ethiopia. No one in Egypt goes hungry, since food prices are subsidized by government (per our Egyptian guide).

                Don't know if this problem will be solved in an equitable manner - I certainly hope so. Right now it is clear that Ethiopia and northern Kenya (among other countries) need more water from a finite source. If more is not done for folks south of Egypt and Sudan, it will not end well - there will be either major famines or local wars.
                Long periods of drought punctuated by short periods of flooding are the nature of the desert climates, especially the climate of North Africa. And the question that I ask, "Why haven't countries in Africa done their homework, their planning, their investment, their water projects, their international co-operation, and their population planning?"

                I am tired of hearing excuses from Africa. For once, the people of Africa need to take responsibility for their own fate, and to not blame others or blame history for their problems.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                  It's happening in south Asia too:
                  The last time water issues pushed India and Pakistan to the brink of armed conflict was half a century ago, when Bashir Ahmad Malik was an engineering student. His government asked him to drop his graduate studies and join a team of experts urgently negotiating a way to share water between the rival countries.

                  “Both sides were threatening war,” he said. “India was shutting the canals, starving or flooding us.”

                  The Indus Water Treaty averted disaster when it was signed in 1960. Even when India and Pakistan did eventually go to war over different issues in the following decades, they continued to respect the water treaty.

                  But the agreement now seems to be unravelling. Dispute-resolution mechanisms, never invoked in the first four decades of the treaty, have been triggered twice in recent years. The latest round of talks broke down earlier this month, as the two sides failed to agree on a neutral umpire to settle a quarrel over India’s plans for the Kishanganga hydroelectric project in northern Kashmir.

                  Even the veteran water expert who assisted with the original negotiations now feels that the treaty was inadequate.

                  “At the time, we felt it would be all right,” Mr. Malik said. “But now, I don't think it was a good treaty for Pakistan.”

                  Loss of faith in the Indus Water Treaty comes at a time when water disputes between the nuclear-armed neighbours have reached unprecedented levels of bombast.
                  Source. This is likely to become more common in the near future.
                  Last edited by nitroglycol; August 05, 2010, 04:25 AM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                    Just to underscore what I was posting about desert climates, Pakistan received record rainfall on July 30, 2010. According to CNN, approximately 325 drowned in the flood because the water ran-off. And why weren't the dams built on the Indus River to impound the monsoon run-off? There is no excuse whatsoever for this.

                    Last year in November, there was flooding in Jeddah, Saudi-Arabia when over six inches of rain came down in one day. Similarly, that water ran-off, and more than 100 people drowned. The Saudi Govn't didn't even bother to build a proper channel for the run-off in the city's wadi. No dams were built along the wadi, nothing.

                    Pakistan is NOT a poor country, and Saudi-Arabia is one of the five richest--- if not the richest--- country on Earth. As I said, "There is no excuse whatsoever for this." I could write a lot more here, but it wouldn't be politically correct for me to do so and to express my anger about their "culture".

                    In America, every last drop of the water in the Colorado River is impounded and used. No water is allowed to run-off to be wasted and flow into the sea. That is the difference between our cultures. ( I dare not say more.)
                    Last edited by Starving Steve; August 04, 2010, 07:16 PM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                      Originally posted by nitroglycol View Post
                      Source. This is likely to become more common in the near future.
                      Your "Source" link got hammered by the link gremlins. From the separate thread you posted last week on this (Water war brewing in south Asia?) I gather a proper link is Globe and Mail.
                      Most folks are good; a few aren't.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                        Oops, thanks. Fixed it.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                          Damns are not the only answer. I get your point, but don't try to sell us on the idea that US water management is a shinning star either. Living on flood plains to begin with is stupid, and we do it all the time. There is a price to pay to remove every free flowing river. The high irrigation damns are especially irritating as we wiped out salmon fishers for crappy subsidized crops where there often there a is cost the tax payer of $10 in water for every $1 worth of crop. The hydro-electric is where the money is. These are also silting up as they always do, and its going to be trouble. Those damns can fail or be overrun. Look at what we did to the Mississippi delta. Instead of letting the water defuse in the swamps we let in run straight into the ocean for a ecological disaster. Now we pump it back over the wall. Lets not even discuss the levy system of New Orleans which was our culture's answer to water and not a good one. How can you say our slate is clean with Katrina? Staying off the flood plains is the answer. That is issue #1 for me when I look for a place to live. Where is the water going to go?
                          Last edited by gwynedd1; August 05, 2010, 05:03 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                            Except the US did not recommend that damn. That is one reason the Russians built it. Egypt had one of the few civilizations based on irrigation that lasted perpetually. The delta swells were big enough to flush saline build up. Not anymore since the damn. Now they have silt and saline build up.

                            This is Cali and its going to get worse.

                            http://westernfarmpress.com/environm...e-column-0119/

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                            • #15
                              Re: Future Water Wars - Nile River

                              Spoken like a Dutchman. They have malaria with which to contend.

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