In 2008, Egypt’s
Mediterranean port city of Damietta saw escalating protest against
EAgrium, a Canadian consortium building a large fertilizer complex
in Ra’s al-Barr. Ra’s al-Barr sits at the end of an estuary,
where the Damietta branch of the Nile River joins the Mediterranean.
It is a prime destination for vacationing Egyptians in the summertime
and the location of the year-round residences of the Damiettan
elite. Fishermen ply the waters offshore. When plans for the
fertilizer complex were announced, a coalition of locals feared
that all three sources of income -- tourism, real estate and
fishing -- would be jeopardized by emissions into the air and
water. As summer temperatures climbed and the protests mounted,
the government found itself caught between its contractual obligations
to international investors and a well-organized local movement
opposed to the project on both environmental and developmental
grounds.
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