Business Day

China and UN urge talks on Ethiopia’s hydropower dam

- Samuel Gebre and David Wainer

China and the UN have backed calls for Ethiopia to resume talks over its plans to begin filling a giant hydropower dam. Egypt is opposed to the plans.

Ethiopia wants to start supplying the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam when the next rainy season begins in July. Egypt insists on having a say in how quickly it is filled, because it will affect the flow of the Nile River, the nation’s main source of fresh water.

The US and the EU have both urged the countries to resolve the issue peacefully.

“We hope the difference­s between the two nations could be resolved through dialogue and peaceful negotiatio­ns,” Zhang Gaohui, chief of political affairs at the Chinese embassy in Ethiopia ’ s capital, Addis Ababa, said in an e-mailed response to questions.

US and World Bank-backed efforts to mediate the dispute between Ethiopia and Egypt broke down in February when Ethiopia withdrew from the talks.

Earlier in May, Egypt accused Ethiopia of having “a policy of unilateral­ism”, according to a letter to the UN Security Council obtained by Bloomberg. In its response, Ethiopia has said it does not have any legal obligation­s to seek Egypt’s approval to fill the dam.

The increased pressure for talks comes as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is distracted by negotiatio­ns with creditors about debt waivers.

Ethiopia is expected to sign a moratorium with the Paris Club in the coming days to free up capital the country needs to deal with the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Sudan has also been party to the discussion­s about the dam.

The Blue Nile, which originates in Ethiopia and is one of the main tributarie­s of the Nile, passes through Sudan en route to Egypt.

The Sudanese government was working to restart tripartite talks, it said on Wednesday.

Ethiopian water minister Seleshi Bekele said on Twitter that Ahmed received a letter from European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and European Council president Charles Michel, offering their support in talks between the three nations.

The UN urged Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan to “peacefully resolve” their difference­s.

“The secretary-general encourages progress towards an amicable agreement,” the spokespers­on for UN head Antonio Guterres said in a statement on Tuesday.

Ethiopia remains resolute that a so-called declaratio­n of principles agreement signed by Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan in 2015 allows it to proceed with damming the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam.

“Ethiopia doesn’t need permission of any downstream country to utilise its legitimate share of water,” Seleshi said in a briefing to African diplomats earlier this week.

“The first stage of the first filling starts this July,” he said.

The dam is set to be Africa’s biggest hydropower dam once it is completed, generating about 6,000MW of electricit­y.

Ethiopia plans to export electricit­y to neighbouri­ng states to help ease an acute foreign exchange shortage.

US AND EU ALSO URGE THE TWO AFRICAN COUNTRIES TO PEACEFULLY RESOLVE THEIR DIFFERENCE­S OVER ETHIOPIAN DAM

 ?? /Gioia Forster/dpa ?? Water rights: Building site machines stand on the constructi­on site of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam in Guba in the North West of Ethiopia.
/Gioia Forster/dpa Water rights: Building site machines stand on the constructi­on site of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam in Guba in the North West of Ethiopia.

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