Page added on December 10, 2006
Now, in a yet unpublished report obtained by The Associated Press, an international consulting firm advises the Ugandan government that supercomputer models of global-warming scenarios for Lake Victoria “raise alarming concerns” about its future and that of the Nile River, which begins its 4,100-mile northward journey here at Jinja.
The report, by U.S.-based Water Resources and Energy Management International, says rising temperatures may evaporate up to half the lake’s normal inflow from rainfall and rivers, with “severe consequences for the lake and its ability to meet the region’s water resources needs.”
A further dramatic drop in Victoria’s water levels might even turn off this spigot for the Nile, a lifeline for more than 100 million Egyptians, Sudanese and others.
“People talk about the snows of Kilimanjaro,” said Aris P. Georgakakos, the study’s chief author, speaking of that African mountain’s melting glaciers. “We have something much bigger to worry about, and that’s Lake Victoria.”
Each troubled lake is a complex story.
Leave a Reply