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Optimization of floodwater redistribution from Lake Nasser could recharge Egypt's aquifers and mitigate its excessive floods

Earth Sciences

Optimization of floodwater redistribution from Lake Nasser could recharge Egypt's aquifers and mitigate its excessive floods

H. Elhaddad, M. Sultan, et al.

This innovative study explores the opportunity of releasing excess water from Lake Nasser to sustainably recharge the depleted Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System, while reducing evaporative losses. Conducted by a team of experts including Hesham Elhaddad and Mohamed Sultan, the research highlights a potential solution stemming from extreme precipitation events in the Nile River source areas.... show more
Abstract
Extreme precipitation periods, possibly related to climate change, over the Nile River source areas caused flooding in Sudan and excess runoff reaching Lake Nasser in Egypt in 1998–2002 and 2019–2022. Excess water from the 1st event (25.5 × 10⁹ m³) was channeled to depressions within the plateau west of the Nile Valley, forming the Tushka Lakes, where it was left to evaporate, a fate that awaits the 53.5 × 10⁹ m³ from the 2nd event while the underlying fossil Nubian Sandstone Aquifer System is being depleted (−0.98 × 10⁹ m³/yr). We simulated release scenarios of excess Lake Nasser waters (53.5 × 10⁹ m³) to proximal lowlands; preference was given to the scenario that recharged the aquifer through infiltration (74.3%) and minimized losses to evaporation (20.1%) and surface runoff (5.6%). Findings serve as an example of adaptations that replace catastrophic consequences of climate change with beneficial and sustainable development opportunities.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Jul 18, 2024
Authors
Hesham Elhaddad, Mohamed Sultan, Eugene Yan, Karem Abdelmohsen, Abdullah T. Mohammad, Ahmed Badawy, Hadi Karimi, Hassan Saleh, Mustafa Kemal Emil
Tags
Lake Nasser
Nubian Sandstone Aquifer
sustainable development
evaporative losses
extreme precipitation
flooding
water management
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