Arab News

New round of talks on Nile waters starts in Khartoum

Two-day meeting draws ministers from Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia

- AP Cairo

Irrigation ministers of three key Nile Basin countries met on Friday in Sudan’s capital, seeking to resolve difference­s over Ethiopia’s soon-to-be-finished Blue Nile dam, which Cairo claims threatens its water supply.

According to the spokesman of Egypt’s Irrigation Ministry, Muhamed El-Sebai, the meeting of the ministers from Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia would last two days. Egypt fears Ethiopia’s $5 billion project, which is set to be Africa’s largest hydroelect­ric dam, could reduce its share of the Nile River — a lifeline for Egypt’s 100 million people.

Ethiopia has roughly the same population and says the dam will help its economic developmen­t. Egypt seeks Sudan’s support in the dispute, as both nations are downriver from the project.

Ethiopia has not revealed how quickly it wants to fill the reservoir created by the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam, as the project is called, which would affect the amount of water available for Egypt and Sudan.

The last round of talks held in Cairo last month failed to make any progress and was followed by a verbal feuds between Ethiopian and Egyptian government­s. Ethiopia’s Foreign Ministry released a strongly worded proposal dismissing Egypt’s proposals on a timetable for filling the reservoir. Ethiopian Minister of Water and Irrigation Sileshi Bekele had said Egypt wants Ethiopia to fill the dam’s reservoir over a longer period of time — seven years — and to release 40 billion cubic meters of water every year.

However, an Egyptian official later told The Associated Press the two countries had agreed the first of five stages for filling the dam should take two years. After these five stages, all the dam’s hydroelect­ric turbines would be able to operate.

Otherwise, Egypt could lose more than 1 million jobs and $1.8 billion annually, said the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to reporters.

Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi brought the issue to UN attention while addressing the General Assembly in New York last month.

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