How the EU growing fertilisers market is drying up Southern Tunisia
Phosphate rocks are the main source of phosphorus - a finite, fundamental element, largely employed in fertilisers production. Ninety percent of phosphate rocks on earth are located in just a handful of countries, among them Tunisia. In search for alternatives to Russian phosphates (also a major exporter), the EU started looking South.
But phosphate extraction comes at a high price. In the Gafsa basin, where Tunisian phosphates come from, farmers lack water for their fields, as this scarce resource is diverted to mines. Herders lose camels and sheep due to contaminated water that pollutes the rivers. Cancer rate in the area is higher than elsewhere in Tunisia, as local communities breathe phosphate’s dust from the nearby deposits and mines.
Mining in Gafsa started at the end of the 19th century, under French colonialism. A century later, the exploitation and depletion of a land that would otherwise be one of the richest in Tunisia, continues in ways that are different only on the surface.
An investigation by Arianna Poletti, Sofian Philip Naceur, and daniela Sala, supported by the Journalismfund Europ