Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)

Logo CNR
  • ×
  • Home
  • People
  • Outputs
  • Organizations
  • Expertise & Skills

UNI-FIND
Logo CNR

|

UNI-FIND

cnr.it
  • ×
  • Home
  • People
  • Outputs
  • Organizations
  • Expertise & Skills
  1. Outputs

Water-quality management in a vulnerable large river: The Nile in Egypt

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2013
abstract:
We review the severe water-management problems of the Nile Basin, where physical water scarcity is associated with high demographic growth, leading to a sharply rising demand for competing water uses such as hydropower and large-scale irrigation. Rapid economic growth is perceived as the means to emerge from the poverty trap that afflicts livelihoods in the Upper Basin and vital wetland ecosystem services such as fish biomass, freshwater biodiversity, groundwater recharge, flow regulation and local climate moderation are threatened by the water-development schemes and pollution that follow from this policy. Their cumulative impacts remain unaddressed. The High Aswan Dam's impacts on freshwater biodiversity are incompletely understood; a significant number of species may have become threatened as a result of its construction. Today the reservoir water quality is high, it is thought to support 47 fish species, its local human activities are restricted by central government regulations and recent estimates indicate that eutrophication threats are unlikely. Sediment and nutrient inputs coming into it from upstream will, however, continue to decrease in the near future as a result of newly built and planned dams in the upper basin. The dams will also reduce discharge and cause further loss of connectivity between the river and its floodplain, exacerbated by the possible completion of the Jonglei Canal bypassing the Sudd swamps. These impacts will affect the Nile's vulnerable aquatic biodiversity and regulatory services that are likely to affect local climate conditions. Under the current geopolitical scenario, management decisions that could favour participatory and sustainable options are over-ruled by high-level political trade-offs between the numerous riparian states. The financing of major hydropower developments by vested interests creates a scenario that is unlikely to favour sustainable resource management and conflict resolution. © 2013 Copyright International Association for Hydro-Environment Engineering and Research.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Biodiversity; connectivity; dams; ecosystem services; Integrated River Basin Management; wetlands
List of contributors:
Salerno, Franco; Tartari, Gianni
Authors of the University:
SALERNO FRANCO
Handle:
https://iris.cnr.it/handle/20.500.14243/307431
Published in:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT
Journal
  • Overview

Overview

URL

http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?eid=2-s2.0-84882286467&partnerID=q2rCbXpz
  • Use of cookies

Powered by VIVO | Designed by Cineca | 26.5.0.0 | Sorgente dati: PREPROD (Ribaltamento disabilitato)