In serene turquoise waters off Egypt's Red Sea coast, scuba divers ease among delicate pink jellyfish and admire coral-yet a rebounding tourism sector threatens the fragile marine ecosystem. A diving instructor in the town of Hurghada, a top resort, warned that the rebound brought dangers for the corals. Before the decline in visitors "there was way too much activity because it was so cheap" he said, asking to remain anonymous. "In some areas, they've disappeared--although in others we see they're coming back".
The United Nations Environment Programme or UNEP, says coral reefs are among "the most beautiful, biologically diverse and delicate ecosystems in the world". It describes these resources as vital to maintaining food supply and protecting the shorelines of low-lying island nations.
Along the seafront in the town of Hurghada, bazaars and resorts offer unbeatable prices to attract budget-conscious European visitors to a country whose vital tourism sector was battered by a 2011 uprising and multiple jihadist attacks. Following the 2011 overthrow of longtime dictator Hosni Mubarak, tourist arrivals in Egypt plunged. The sector took a further beating in 2015, when jihadists blew up a Russian plane that took off from another major Red Sea resort, Sharm al-Sheikh, killing 224 people. But the contribution of Egypt's tourism sector to GDP rose 16.5 percent last year to 29.6 billion dollars the highest level since 2010, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council. Egypt has not published its own official statistics for the year.
UNEP estimates that about 20 percent of the world's coral reefs have been destroyed and a further 60 per cent are under threat-from climate change, overfishing and tourism. Many people who live close to reefs depend on them for a living, and Egypt's resort towns are no exception. Scientists consider the Red Sea's reefs the most climate change-resilient corals but say they are still under threat.
"The revival of tourism in Egypt is a good thing, but it has increased pressure" on the reefs, said Heba Shawky, managing director of the Hurghada Environmental Protection and Conservation Association.
The campaign group was founded in 1992 by diving professionals who were worried about the potential impact of mass tourism in the region. Around 1,700 tourist boats operate along Egypt's Red Sea coast, according to the Red Sea province, while the Suez Canal Authority says 18,174 commercial vessels passed through the Suez Canal last year. Shawky said the NGO has set up around 1,200 buoys on various dive sites to prevent the use of anchors, which damage corals. But, she added, much remains to be done-such as reducing the number and size of dive boats, which can be up to 50 meters long. "It's about limiting the number of users per day to tackle the problem of the growing number of boats," Shawky said.
General Ahmed Abdallah, governor of Egypt's Red Sea province, agreed. "We are making every effort to preserve the marine environment and stop any pollution affecting the reefs," he told AFP. Abdallah pointed to the absence of highly polluting industries such as steel, cement or ceramics production in the region. He also noted the province's recent decision to ban single-use plastics, which are highly damaging to marine life.