Aswan dam
From Envirowiki
Before the Aswan dam the Nile river flooded regularly, damaging cities and endangering lives. the flood was also the only irrigation for farmers on the floodplains, and s it only happened for a month or so every year, the land was dry for the rest of the year and practically barren, for farming purposes.
[edit] 1 The Idea
Assumably with the best intentions the British Government of the day (turn of last century) decided that lower Egypt needed:
- Flood mitigation
- Hydro-electricity, and
- year-round irrigation
Obviously these would be great things to have (might take some of the excitement out of life, though). The values are commendable: food security, safety, and the possibility to grow economically. But that’s not exactly what happened.
[edit] 2 The Fuck-up
all the benefits of the dam materialised perfectly as expected. the Nile now has no dangerous floods, heaps of hydro-power, and year-round irrigation-on-demand. Unfortunately, it also has:
- Less soil nutrients: the floods brought nutrient rich soils from the upper Nile. Now Egyptians have to BUY fertiliser.
- less biodiversity: the fish in the Nile delta, which supported a lot of people, lived off (down the food chain) sea grass, which lived off the nutrients of the flood-silt. Fish stocks dropped by about 2/3.
- Dredging is now required to remove the silt from behind the dam.
- Schistosomiasis, a parasite that lives in the flood-plain mud now has a year-round water supply due to irrigation. It is horribly debilitating and incurable. Infection rates jumped from 5% to 40%.

