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Egypt Climate and Weather

Throughout Egypt, days are commonly warm or hot, and nights are cool. Egypt has only two seasons: a mild winter from November to April and a hot summer from May to October. The only differences between the seasons are variations in daytime temperatures and changes in prevailing winds. In the coastal regions, temperatures range between an average minimum of 14° C in winter and an average maximum of 30° C in summer.

Temperatures vary widely in the inland desert areas, especially in summer, when they may range from 7° C at night to 43° C during the day. During winter, temperatures in the desert fluctuate less dramatically, but they can be as low as 0° C at night and as high as 18° C during the day.

The average annual temperature increases moving southward from the Delta to the Sudanese border, where temperatures are similar to those of the open deserts to the east and west. In the north, the cooler temperatures of Alexandria during the summer have made the city a popular resort. Throughout the Delta and the northern Nile Valley, there are occasional winter cold spells accompanied by light frost and even snow. At Aswan, in the south, June temperatures can be as low as 10° C at night and as high as 41° C during the day when the sky is clear.

Egypt receives fewer than eighty millimeters of precipitation annually in most areas. Most rain falls along the coast, but even the wettest area, around Alexandria, receives only about 200 millimeters of precipitation per year. Alexandria has relatively high humidity, but sea breezes help keep the moisture down to a comfortable level. Moving southward, the amount of precipitation decreases suddenly. Cairo receives a little more than one centimeter of precipitation each year. The city, however, reports humidity as high as 77 percent during the summer. But during the rest of the year, humidity is low. The areas south of Cairo receive only traces of rainfall. Some areas will go years without rain and then experience sudden downpours that result in flash floods. Sinai receives somewhat more rainfall (about twelve centimeters annually in the north) than the other desert areas, and the region is dotted by numerous wells and oases, which support small population centers that formerly were focal points on trade routes. Water drainage toward the Mediterranean Sea from the main plateau supplies sufficient moisture to permit some agriculture in the coastal area, particularly near Al Arish.

A phenomenon of Egypt's climate is the hot spring wind that blows across the country. The winds, known to Europeans as the sirocco and to Egyptians as the khamsin, usually arrive in April but occasionally occur in March and May. The winds form in small but vigorous low-pressure areas in the Isthmus of Suez and sweep across the northern coast of Africa. Unobstructed by geographical features, the winds reach high velocities and carry great quantities of sand and dust from the deserts. These sandstorms, often accompanied by winds of up to 140 kilometers per hour, can cause temperatures to rise as much as 20° C in two hours. The winds blow intermittently and may continue for days, cause illness in people and animals, harm crops, and occasionally damage houses and infrastructure.

M
o
n
t
h
T
y
p
e
Cairo

Min/Max
Alexandria

Min/Max
Luxor

Min/Max
Aswan

Min/Max
Hurghada

Air/Water
Average
Sharm

Air/Water
Average
Forecast Forecast Forecast Forecast Forecast Forecast
Jan C
F
8.6/19.1
47/66
9.3/18.3
49/65
5.4/23
42/74
8/23.8
46/75
24/18
75/64
24/18
75/64
Feb C
F
9.3/21
48/69
9.7/19.2
49/67
6.8/25.4
44/78
9.4/26.1
49/79
25/18
77/64
25/18
77/64
March C
F
11.2/23.7
52/75
11.3/21
52/70
10.7/29
51/84
12.6/30.4
54/86
26/20
79/68
26/20
79/68
April C
F
13.9/28.2
56/83
14.5/23.6
58/75
15.7/35
60/95
17.5/36
63/97
31/25
88/77
31/25
88/77
May C
F
17.4/32.4
63/90
16.7/26.5
62/80
20.7/39.3
69/103
21.1/38.5
71/101
35/26
95/79
35/26
95/79
June C
F
19.9/34.5
68/95
20.4/28.2
69/83
22.6/41
72/107
24.2/42.1
76/108
37/28
99/82
37/28
99/82
July C
F
21.5/35.4
71/96
22.7/29.6
73/86
23.6/40.8
74/106
24.5/42
76/108
40/28
107/82
40/28
107/82
Aug C
F
21.6/34.8
71/95
22.9/30.4
73/87
23.5/41
74/107
24.7/41.3
76/107
42/29
108/84
42/29
108/84
Sept C
F
19.9/23.3
68/89
21.3/29.4
71/85
21.5/38.5
71/101
22.2/39.6
72/103
38/27
100/81
38/27
100/81
Oct C
F
17.8/29.8
64/86
17.9/27.7
64/82
17.8/35.1
64/95
19.3/36.6
66/99
32/25
90/77
32/25
90/77
Nov C
F
12.1/24.1
54/75
14.8/24.4
59/76
12.3/29.6
54/85
14.5/30.2
58/86
26/23
79/73
26/23
79/73
Dec C
F
10.4/20.7
51/69
11.2/20.4
52/69
7.7/24.8
45/76
9.9/20.5
50/69
26/19
79/66
26/19
79/66


Egypt Geography

• Location:

Northern Africa, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Libya and the Gaza Strip, and the Red Sea north of Sudan, and includes the Asian Sinai Peninsula

• Geographic coordinates:           27 00 N, 30 00 E

• Map references:

• Area:

  total: 1,001,450 sq km
  land: 995,450 sq km
  water: 6,000 sq km

• Area - comparative:      slightly more than three times the size of New Mexico

• Land boundaries:

  total: 2,665 km
  border countries: Gaza Strip 11 km, Israel 266 km, Libya 1,115 km, Sudan 1,273 km

• Coastline:         2,450 km

Elevation extremes:

  lowest point: Qattara Depression -133 m
  highest point: Mount Catherine 2,629 m

• Land use:

  arable land: 2.92%
  permanent crops: 0.5%
  other: 96.58%

• Irrigated land:       34,220 sq km (2003)

• Geography - note:

 Controls Sinai Peninsula, only land bridge between Africa and remainder of Eastern  Hemisphere; controls Suez Canal, a sea link between Indian Ocean and Mediterranean  Sea; size, and juxtaposition to Israel, establish its major role in Middle Eastern  geopolitics; dependence on upstream neighbors; dominance of Nile basin issues; prone  to influxes of refugees.



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