Management of Water and Salinity in the Nile Delta
Period of Implementations
Sep 01, 2012 - Aug 31, 2016
Total budget
1,529,810
Project Name Management of Water and Salinity in the Nile Delta: a cross-scale integrated analysis of efficiency and equity issues
About
The Nile Delta covers an agricultural area of approximately 2.5 million ha, irrigated by a dense network of waterways, including 40,000 km of canals that branch off the Nile River and convey water to over 2 million farmers across several nested geographical scales and institutional levels. Intermingled with these conveyance canals are 18,000 km of drains, where water is both partially reused by farmers and pumped back to higher level delivery canals, and eventually conveyed to coastal lakes and the sea. The recycling of drainage water, a deficient or ill-maintained drainage system, and inappropriate in-field management of applied water contribute to salt loading of the system that has significant negative effects on its productivity (Ghassemi et al. 1995). Understanding the causes of, and developing management strategies to address, the issue of salt loads is imperative for the Government of Egypt.
Impact
Goals
The overall aim of the project is to identify physical and institutional interventions that improve water management in the Nile Delta, using an integrated approach across scales (farm to main canal level) and encompassing water quantity–quality interactions
Objectives
Identify&develop strategies addressing institutional&technical barriers associated with the management of main and branch canals and assess effectiveness of collective action in functional operation of (WUAs) at tertiary/secondary levels. Develop and assess marwa- and farm-level interventions improving productivity of diverse farming systems, and contributing to increased water productivity under conditions of salinity.
Salinization is a common problem for agriculture in dryland environments and it has greatly affected land productivity
and even caused cropland abandonment in Central and Southern Iraq. Hence it is of pressing importance to
quantify the spatial...