Satellite
images released last Tuesday by the US-based company Maxar Technologies showed
water pooling in a reservoir behind a controversial dam on the Blue Nile in
Ethiopia, prompting officials in Egypt to demand urgent clarification and those
in neighbouring Sudan to complain that water levels were dropping along the
river.
Nine years of
talks and several fragile agreements over how to share the water of the world's
longest river were almost thrown out of the window last week — all because of a
bout of heavy rain.
It now seems
that heavy rains had caused the reservoir to swell, but as Ethiopia has
repeatedly said it will fill the dam with or without a deal with the other two
nations, the images had authorities in Egypt and Sudan worried. If Ethiopia
does begin filling the dam at a rapid pace, they fear it could have profound
effects on their own water supplies.
On the same
day, the three nations had failed to reach an agreement over how the project
should proceed, as the latest round of talks crashed out.
The Grand
Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), an ambitious $4.5 billion hydropower project,
is emblematic of Ethiopia's goal to become a key regional player.
It aims to
provide electricity to around 60% of Ethiopian households which are so far not
covered by the power grid, and is part of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's vision to
transform the country into a major regional exporter of energy.
Without
electricity, many Ethiopians rely on shrinking forests for firewood, while the
40% of the country which is technically connected to the grid suffers from
disruptive power cuts, Birhanu Lenjiso, co-founder of the East African Policy
Research Institute, told CNN.
"It is a
very dire situation. It's a very sad situation that we have been living like
that for centuries when we actually contribute about 85% of the Nile water and
we are not using any of that water," he added.
But to Egypt,
the dam threatens one of its most precious resources. Most of Egypt's 102
million people live in the narrow Nile valley, along the river, and depend on
it for everything from drinking water to industrial use and irrigation.
"My
father and grandfather have lived by the Nile and my children and grandchildren
will live by the Nile," Ahmed Abdel-Wahab, a farmer from southern Egypt,
told CNN. He speculated that the dam could lead to a 60% drop in his annual
crops and an increase in water costs. "We are very worried. All farmers
are worried," he said.
Sudan would
mostly benefit from the dam's low-priced electricity and a steady water flow
that will reduce flooding and increase irrigation, according to the
International Crisis Group. But its proximity to the project -- just 12.5 miles
from its border with Ethiopia -- could make its own Roseires Dam vulnerable to
flooding, without proper coordination.
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