-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Patrice Riemens
Sent: Tuesday, June 07, 2011 4:01 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: <nettime> Lester Brown: When the Nile Runs Dry (NYT)



Without Bread No Internet!


original to: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/02/opinion/02Brown.html

When the Nile Runs Dry
By LESTER R. BROWN

Washington

A NEW scramble for Africa is under way. As global food prices rise and
exporters reduce shipments of commodities, countries that rely on imported
grain are panicking. Affluent countries like Saudi Arabia, South Korea,
China and India have descended on fertile plains across the African
continent, acquiring huge tracts of land to produce wheat, rice and corn for
consumption back home.

Some of these land acquisitions are enormous. South Korea, which imports 70
percent of its grain, has acquired 1.7 million acres in Sudan to grow wheat
- an area twice the size of Rhode Island. In Ethiopia, a Saudi firm has
leased 25,000 acres to grow rice, with the option of expanding. India has
leased several hundred thousand acres there to grow corn, rice and other
crops. And in countries like Congo and Zambia, China is acquiring land for
biofuel production.

These land grabs shrink the food supply in famine-prone African nations and
anger local farmers, who see their governments selling their ancestral lands
to foreigners. They also pose a grave threat to Africa's newest
democracy: Egypt.

Egypt is a nation of bread eaters. Its citizens consume 18 million tons of
wheat annually, more than half of which comes from abroad. Egypt is now the
world's leading wheat importer, and subsidized bread - for which the
government doles out approximately $2 billion per year - is seen as an
entitlement by the 60 percent or so of Egyptian families who depend on it.

As Egypt tries to fashion a functioning democracy after President Hosni
Mubarak's departure, land grabs to the south are threatening its ability to
put bread on the table because all of Egypt's grain is either imported or
produced with water from the Nile River, which flows north through Ethiopia
and Sudan before reaching Egypt. (Since rainfall in Egypt is negligible to
nonexistent, its agriculture is totally dependent on the
Nile.)

Unfortunately for Egypt, two of the favorite targets for land acquisitions
are Ethiopia and Sudan, which together occupy three-fourths of the Nile
River Basin. Today's demands for water are such that there is little left of
the river when it eventually empties into the Mediterranean.

The Nile Waters Agreement, which Egypt and Sudan signed in 1959, gave Egypt
75 percent of the river's flow, 25 percent to Sudan and none to Ethiopia.
This situation is changing abruptly as wealthy foreign governments and
international agribusinesses snatch up large swaths of arable land along the
Upper Nile. While these deals are typically described as land acquisitions,
they are also, in effect, water acquisitions.

Now, when competing for Nile water, Cairo must deal with several governments
and commercial interests that were not party to the 1959 agreement.
Moreover, Ethiopia - never enamored of the agreement - has announced plans
to build a huge hydroelectric dam on its branch of the Nile that would
reduce the water flow to Egypt even more.

Because Egypt's wheat yields are already among the world's highest, it has
little potential to raise its agricultural productivity. With its population
of 81 million projected to reach 101 million by 2025, finding enough food
and water is a daunting challenge.

Egypt's plight could become part of a larger, more troubling scenario. Its
upstream Nile neighbors - Sudan, with 44 million people, and Ethiopia, with
83 million - are growing even faster, increasing the need for water to
produce food. Projections by the United Nations show the combined population
of these three countries increasing to 272 million by 2025 - and 360 million
by 2050 - from 208 million now.

Growing water demand, driven by population growth and foreign land and water
acquisitions, are straining the Nile's natural limits. Avoiding dangerous
conflicts over water will require three transnational initiatives. First,
governments must address the population threat head-on by ensuring that all
women have access to family planning services and by providing education for
girls in the region. Second, countries must adopt more water-efficient
irrigation technologies and plant less water-intensive crops.

Finally, for the sake of peace and future development cooperation, the
nations of the Nile River Basin should come together to ban land grabs by
foreign governments and agribusiness firms. Since there is no precedent for
this, international help in negotiating such a ban, similar to the World
Bank's role in facilitating the 1960 Indus Waters Treaty between India and
Pakistan, would likely be necessary to make it a reality.

None of these initiatives will be easy to implement, but all are essential.
Without them, rising bread prices could undermine Egypt's revolution of hope
and competition for the Nile's water could turn deadly.

----
Lester R. Brown is the president of the Earth Policy Institute and the
author of "World on the Edge: How to Prevent Environmental and Economic
Collapse."



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