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Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of Ethiopia and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi discussed the issue of the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) during a regional meeting on the war in Sudan. Post discussions, the two leaders issued a joint statement on the “fast-track negotiations”, which should be completed within four months.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of Ethiopia and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi discussed the issue of the Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) during a regional meeting on the war in Sudan. Post discussions, the two leaders issued a joint statement on the “fast-track negotiations”, which should be completed within four months.
This significant step forward was immediately welcomed by the African Union (AU). The talks that began focused on how Egypt and Ethiopia will resolve future differences. As well as the amount of water that Ethiopia will release downstream in the event of a prolonged drought. And this is a key issue, since Ethiopia, like other countries in the Horn of Africa, has been facing a drought for more than 4 years.
For Ethiopia, the GERD is an essential project for developing its installed capacity and supplying the electricity it needs to keep its economy growing. For its part, Egypt still sees the construction of a reservoir on the tributaries of the Nile as an “existential threat”. The country of 110 million people depends on the Nile for 80% of its water supply. At least 85% of the Nile’s water flows from the highlands of northern Ethiopia.
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The aim of the talks is precisely to find common ground, although questions remain, notably about the mediation of the AU, as desired by Ethiopia, or about the need for a binding agreement, as demanded by Egypt and Sudan, the other beneficiary country of the Nile waters, which is contesting the construction of the GERD. In the meantime, Addis Ababa is pressing ahead with this $4.5 billion mega-project.
In January 2022, Ethiopia began production tests on its power plant after filling its dam, which can hold 79 billion m3 of water. The first two 700 MW units are gradually being commissioned. Once fully operational, the Gerd will have a capacity of 5,250 MW, i.e. almost twice the installed capacity of a country like Kenya (2,819 MW).