The High Aswan Dam converted a variable and uncertain flow of Nile river water into a predictable and controllable water supply stored in Lake Nasser. We use a computable general equilibrium model of the Egyptian economy to estimate the economic impact of the High Aswan Dam. We compare the actual 1997 economy to the 1997 economy as it would have been if historical pre-dam Nile flows (drawn from a 72Â year portrait) had applied (i.e., the Dam had not been built). The steady water supply sustained by the High Aswan Dam increased transport productivity, and year round availability of predictable and adequate water sustained a shift towards more valuable summer crops. These static effects are worth EGP 4.9Â billion. Investments in transport and...
A multi-country, multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) model is employed to evaluate the...
Regulation of rivers by dams and reservoirs is a good example where anthropogenic impact could be co...
For millennia the Nile supplied Egypt with more water than needed. As the population grew and the ec...
The High Aswan Dam converted a variable and uncertain flow of Nile river water into a predictable an...
The High Aswan Dam converted a variable and uncertain flow of river water into a predictable and con...
Employing a multi-region multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) modeling framework, this ...
The study assesses the transboundary economic impacts of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) ...
A multidisciplinary study was conducted to investigate the environmental and economic impact of the ...
ABSTRACT History tells us that Egypt’s fertile land is the gift of the Nile. However, for the ® rst ...
When construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is completed, the Nile will have two...
A novel integrated hydro-economic modeling framework that links a bottom-up partial equilibrium (eng...
Egypt's irrigation systems are inefficient; the use of water is profligate and soil salinity levels ...
The upper Blue Nile River Basin in Ethiopia is a largely untapped resource despite its huge potentia...
Although it is well known that sedimentation may reduce the storage capacity of a dam, there is rela...
Egypt depends on the Nile River to secure 95% of the water needed for different purposes as drinking...
A multi-country, multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) model is employed to evaluate the...
Regulation of rivers by dams and reservoirs is a good example where anthropogenic impact could be co...
For millennia the Nile supplied Egypt with more water than needed. As the population grew and the ec...
The High Aswan Dam converted a variable and uncertain flow of Nile river water into a predictable an...
The High Aswan Dam converted a variable and uncertain flow of river water into a predictable and con...
Employing a multi-region multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) modeling framework, this ...
The study assesses the transboundary economic impacts of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) ...
A multidisciplinary study was conducted to investigate the environmental and economic impact of the ...
ABSTRACT History tells us that Egypt’s fertile land is the gift of the Nile. However, for the ® rst ...
When construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is completed, the Nile will have two...
A novel integrated hydro-economic modeling framework that links a bottom-up partial equilibrium (eng...
Egypt's irrigation systems are inefficient; the use of water is profligate and soil salinity levels ...
The upper Blue Nile River Basin in Ethiopia is a largely untapped resource despite its huge potentia...
Although it is well known that sedimentation may reduce the storage capacity of a dam, there is rela...
Egypt depends on the Nile River to secure 95% of the water needed for different purposes as drinking...
A multi-country, multi-sector computable general equilibrium (CGE) model is employed to evaluate the...
Regulation of rivers by dams and reservoirs is a good example where anthropogenic impact could be co...
For millennia the Nile supplied Egypt with more water than needed. As the population grew and the ec...