Bangkok Post

Meetings set to solve Nile dam dispute

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WASHINGTON: Officials from Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan say they have agreed to hold two technical meetings soon in an effort to resolve a number of issues revolving around a US$5 billion (151.6 billion baht) dam project on the Nile River.

The foreign ministers of the three countries met in Washington on Monday with US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and World Bank President David Malpass in an effort to resolve the dispute.

In a joint statement, the officials said progress had been made in earlier meetings with the ministers of water resources from the three countries.

Two more technical meetings will take place in coming weeks centred on rules and guidelines for the filling and operation of the dam, the statement said.

“The ministers recognise that there are substantia­l benefits to all three countries in developing rules and guidelines to address drought conditions,” the joint statement said.

The statement said the implementa­tion of these rules will be undertaken by Ethiopia but may be adjusted by the three countries in line with water conditions in any given year.

The group of officials will reconvene in Washington on Jan 13 to review the results of technical meetings which will be held in Khartoum, Sudan, and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, the statement said.

The project, called the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam, is around 70% complete and promises to provide much needed electricit­y for Ethiopia’s 70 million people. However, Egyptian officials are concerned that filing the reservoir behind the dam could significan­tly reduce the amount of Nile water available to Egypt.

The joint statement said the rules and guidelines developed for the operation of the dam would include ways of mitigating drought conditions based upon the natural flow of the Nile and water release rates from the dam’s reservoir.

Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly this autumn, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi said he would never allow Ethiopia to impose a “de facto situation” by filling the dam without an agreement on its operation. “While we acknowledg­e Ethiopia’s right to developmen­t, the water of the Nile is a question of life, a matter of existence for Egypt,” he said.

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