Desert Case Studies
Desert Case Studies
Desert Case Studies
Demographics
Greece Niger
Population Growth
0.15% per year 2.9% per year
Rate
Birth Rate 9.5 / 1000 population per year 49.6 / 1000 population per year
GDP composition by agric: 3.6% → industry: 24.5% → agric.: 39% → industry: 17% →
sector services: 68% services: 4%
Economy
Niger
Greece
has a capitalist economy with the public sector accounting for about 40%
of GDP
immigrants make up 1/5 of the work force → mainly in agric. and unskilled
jobs
Desertification in Greece
Problems Solutions
the Messara Plain South of Heraklion, in the Messara Faneromeni dam constructed in
area, is at immediate risk of 1999 and completed in 2003 →
desertification → over 15 mil euros an earth dam with a capacity of
have already been spent on the 17 mil cubic metres - must wait a
construction of the Faneromeni few more years to see results →
dam near Vori - the mean temp. in progress slow - four years after
Jan 2007 was 3 degrees higher (12 the completion of the dam, the
deg cel) than in Jan 2006 (9 deg construction of the irrigation
cel) → the water tavle is 5-10 pipelines has only just been put
metres lower than in 2006, and up to tender → another project in
to 22 metres lower than in 2005 in the works is the redirection of
some areas the Platys River, which flows into
the sea at Agia Galini → it is
estimated that almost 120 mil
cubic metres of surface and
groundwater flow into the Platys
catchment basin, only 3% of this
Desertification in Niger
Problems Solutions
Background the Ténéré desert (part of the a project to study the causes and
Sahara) accounts for 350,000 of effects of desert windstorms and
Niger’s 1,267,000 square kms - 3/4 what actions can be taken to
make the effects of these less
Tuaregs of Niger
problem = increasing uranium mining in the areas where the Tuaregs live in
Niger is decreasing their quality of life
all uranium mines are located in the centre of a major geographic feature of
the North in Niger → called the Azawagh Valley
practices
adjustments of the Tuaregs to the extreme weather and climate in the Sahara
dairy tenders manage their herd so that they give birth during the rainy
season where their is plenty of pasture for the offspring
African countries are building a wall of trees and vegetation 4,349 miles long
to prevent desertification
the wall is going across the northern part of the Savanna biome of Africa
known as the Sahel
goals = 8,500 km long, 15km wide, the restoration 100 mil hectares of land
by 2030
benefits
Somalia 2009-2011
the worst drought to hit the area in 60 years
Demographics
When 2009-2011
La Niña
Socio-Economic Impacts
No plants farmers fled this area which caused even more starvation
Political
Vulnerability
Lack of
cannot receive aid due to
humanitarian 10.7 mil people in need of this
al-Shabab
access
Adjustments
“Conflict, not drought, is the reason so many Somalis are dying needlessly…
Conflict has turned hunger into famine and disaster into tragedy”
the Nile measures 6,825 km from its source in Lake Victoria in Uganda and
Tanzania to its mouth at the Mediterranean Sea
Problems
the Nile Delta is Africa’s most productive farmland → being eaten away
sediment is being trapped behind the Aswan High Dam → prevents people
who farm the land downstream from receiving fertile silt
fishing industry is booming in the lake trapped behind the dam (Lake
Nassar)
the increasing silt behind the dam may rise the water levels causing the
lake to overflow the dam
the weight of the silt may weaken the foundations of the dam → causing it
to collapse completely
the river now leaves behind up to one ton per hectare of salts every year
3. Floods in Khartoum
lies at the confluence of two main tributaries of the Nile (the Blue and White
Nile)
torrential rain causes the Nile to rise 16 meters and burst its banks
the international nature of the drainage basin means that use of water in one
part of the basin may affect the use in another part
Egypt and Sudan account for 90% of the water drawn from the river
growing competition for use of the Nile due to developing industrial and food
production
Ethiopia plans to build a Tana dam near the source of the Blue Nile which
could divert 39% of the river’s water
Egypt has threatened to attack Ethiopia because they are taking too
much water from the Nile
in Feb 1999 → the ‘Nile Basin Initiative’ → all countries agreed to co-
operate so that the use of water is fairer in the future
Solutions
1. Greening of Sinai
building towns in this area would relieve pressure on cities like Cairo
increased food production could ease Egypt’s need to import food to feed
its increasing population
half of the water for this project would come from the Nile
concerns = disruptions of the Bedouin people who live in the area, as well
as the natural environment
in a joint Egyptian and Sudanese project → the canal was designed to speed
up the movement of water along the White Nile through the Sudd swamps
less water would evaporate in the hot climate of Sudd → more water would
reach the Nile
concerns = the 360 km long canal would have a devastating effect on the
swampland environment
project stopped in 1983 after rebel forces attacked the canal’s engineersw
gov. is trying to encourage people to move into the desert by advertising their
new plan called “Toshka”
plan = $70 bil project to reclaim 1.5 mil hectares of desert over the next 10
years
controversies
critics suggest it may be more wise for Egypt’s government to mollify its
own population rather than heed its neighbours concerns
this plan can add increasing tensions over Nile water-sharing arrangements
in order to green the desert, Egypt might have to take more than its share
in the Nile water determined by international treaties
Environmental
desert tourism may be profitable, but could destroy fragile wildlife habitats
that might otherwise draw tourists
Economic
this plan will cost $70 billion dollars over the next 10 years
makes more sense to turn the desert into a tourist industry and give out jobs
Physical
lush fields of cauliflower, apricot trees, and melon growing among a vast
stretch of sand north of Cairo’s pyramids
Social
Egypt is slowly greening the sand that covers almost all its territory to create
more space for its
growing population
Most of the 74 million people in Egypt live along the Nile River and the
Mediterranean Sea
Cairo is one of the most densely populated cities and its population is
expected to double by 2050
Cairo is home to 18 mil people → criticized for its made infrastructure and
horrendous traffic → this project would help ease congestion and
overpopulation
solution = the Chinese gov. has spent a year working towards better long-
range forecasts of sandstorms
satellites
radar
sounding balloons