Your search found 12 records
(Location: IWMI-SA Call no: 333.91 G000 THO Record No: H013909)
(5.15 MB) (5.14MB)
Study undertaken in four medium sized cities and their surrounding agricultural areas.Information on the extent to which water development and use were consistent with, or detrimental to, maintenance of the long-term adequacy and quality of water resources
2 Schuurmans, W.; van der Krogt, W. N. M. 1992. Decision support system for irrigation networks. In Feyen, J.; Mwendera, E.; Badji, M. (Eds.), Advances in planning, design and management of irrigation systems as related to sustainable land use: Proceedings of an International Conference organized by the Center for Irrigation Engineering of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in cooperation with the European Committee for Water Resources Management, Leuven, Belgium, 14-17 September 1992. Vol. 2. Leuven, Belgium: Center for Irrigation Engineering. pp.727-736.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.1 G000 FEY Record No: H014453)
3 Alnaggar, D. 1991. Management of groundwater table and control of water logging and salinity in Fayoum depression. In ICID, The Special Technical Session: Proceedings, Beijing, China, April 1991. Vol.1-C: Irrigation management. New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.192-203.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7 G000 ICI Record No: H014927)
4 Darwish, A.; Fakir, A.; Menting, G. 1993. Drainage design analyses of large scale areas. In ICID, 15th International Congress on Irrigation and Drainage, The Hague, The Netherlands, 1993: Water management in the next century. Transactions: Vol.1-B, Question 44, R36-R72: Planning and design of irrigation and drainage systems. New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.735-742.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7 G000 ICI Record No: H015241)
5 Wynia, P.; Groeneveld, J. 1995. RS/GIS in land and water use management: Geographic information technology applied in Burkina Faso and Egypt. Land and Water International, 82:17-21.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 3906 Record No: H016935)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: PER Record No: H017580)
7 Farouk, A.; Worsley, S. 1996. The CAREA-Egypt Farmlink Project. In Scarborough, V. (Ed.), Farmer-led approaches to extension: Papers presented at a Workshop in the Philippines, July 1995. London, UK: ODI. pp.29-33. (ODI Agricultural Research & Extension network paper 59c)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ODI/96/59C Record No: H018202)
8 Price, D. H. 1995. The cultural effects of conveyance loss in gravity-fed irrigation systems. Ethnology, 34(4):273-291.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 4237 Record No: H018297)
9 Mokhtar, M.; Nieuwenhuis, D.; Verstappen, R. 1996. Farmers' involvement in secondary canal management: Experiences with organizational development in the Fayoum Governorate, Egypt. In ICID, 16th Congress on Irrigation and Drainage, Cairo, Egypt, 1996: Sustainability of Irrigated Agriculture - Transactions, Vol.1.B, Q.46. R.2.01 ... New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.199-216.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7 G000 ICI Record No: H019524)
10 Fahlbuasch, H. 1996. Ancient dams in Egypt. In ICID, 16th Congress on Irrigation and Drainage, Cairo, Egypt, 1996: Sustainability of Irrigated Agriculture - Transactions, Vol.1G: History Seminar - 6th seminar on history of irrigation, drainage and flood control with special reference to Egypt - R.2. New Delhi, India: ICID. pp.21-42.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: ICID 631.7.1 G000 ICI Record No: H09190)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H050679)
(8.40 MB)
Egypt suffers from severe water scarcity, which affects the sustainability of agricultural production. Therefore, the sustainable use of available water resources under water scarcity requires the adoption of water allocation policies favoring conservative and efficient use. Water management with free satellite data and geographical information system modeling capabilities can be a valuable approach for optimizing the benefits from the available water resources to meet the requirements for agricultural lands. This study aims to (i) detect and evaluate changes in agricultural areas because of urbanization and reclamation activities using Landsat data in 1999, 2009, and 2019 and (ii) update the irrigation water demand by monitoring the seasonal changes of agricultural area based on normalized difference vegetation index. Water management of Fayoum Governorate in Egypt is characterized by a non-uniform distribution flow over its canals; thus, two pilot areas are selected. The first site is the Sinnuris canal, the served areas of which represents the urbanization problem. The other site is the Gharaq canal, the served areas of which represents the urbanization and agricultural expansion situations. The results reveal that changes in agricultural areas considerably affect the uniformity of water management. Urbanization activities reduce the agricultural area by ~5.0% and 5.7% in Sinnuris and Gharaq served areas, respectively. However, the newly cultivated lands in Gharaq preserve an increase of 5.8% in the total agricultural area. The considerably changed water allocation strategies in these districts since Sinnuris has an excess of 1.5 m3/s of water supply, while the Gharaq area faced an irrigation shortage of 0.26 m3/s in 2019. As per the proposed approach, the decision-makers can readjust the water allocation plan to satisfy the water requirements for other demand areas.
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: e-copy only Record No: H051792)
(3.92 MB) (3.92 MB)
Municipal solid waste generation and disposal are significant environmental problems in both urban and rural communities due to the increasing population, especially in developing countries, and the lack or absence of a proper waste management service. The present work aims to study the waste management system in rural areas to select an appropriate treatment facility to improve the waste management system. Hence, three villages (Qalamshah, Monshat Ramzy, and Abou Defeya) in Markaz Etsa in Fayoum Governorate were selected as study areas due to the waste management system weakness. In this respect, characterization study in these three villages where MSW management services are either non-existent or insufficient: thus, making them a high priority and an effective advancement step towards achieving the bigger goal of sustainable municipal solid waste management. The results showed that the percentage of organic in these three villages is 76%, 67%, and 80% without diapers percentage which represents 9.3%, 14.3%, and 5.8% respectively. Three life cycle assessment scenarios (landfill scenario, anaerobic digestion, and Composting Scenario) were carried out and simulated using WRATE software. The composting and anaerobic scenarios have comparable and similar values in the following categories: global warming potential, acid rain, eutrophication potential, and resource depletion. In the category of acidification, the composting and anaerobic categories produce higher values than the landfill scenario. Finally, the feasibility study proves that the compost treatment plant is the best solution for the current situation of municipal solid waste for the annual savings by an amount of EGP 1,365,043 over the project period. Also, the compost solution is beneficial due to the availability of areas in Fayoum governorate and will be used for land reclamations as the Egyptian government started to reclaim a huge desert area near these villages.
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