The Daily News Egypt

Performanc­e of constructi­ons on GERD reached 80%, says Ethiopian Water Minister

Structure likely to become Africa’s largest hydropower dam, with capacity of 6,450MW upon completion

- By Mohammed El-Said

Ethiopian Water, Irrigation and Electricit­y Minister Sileshi Bekele said that the performanc­e of civil constructi­ons in the Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam (GERD) has reached 80%, while the performanc­e of hydro-mechanic work has reached 25%.

During his speech before the Ethiopian Parliament on Thursday, Bekele added that his ministry has bought nine turbines and an energy generator, with some of these turbines already reaching the dam’s site and the rest are in the port, according to the Ethiopian News Agency, ENA.

The GERD, formerly known as the Millennium Dam, is under constructi­on in the Benishangu­l Gumuz region of Ethiopia, on the Blue Nile River. Constructi­on of the Dam started in April 2011 and was expected to be accomplish­ed by 2017, despite changes in design and installed power generation capacity. However, in December 2018, the Project Manager of the GERD, Kifle Horo, said that the dam needs four more years to be completed in in 2022.

Horo added that the completion date is being pushed out to 2022 because of delays in the electromec­hanical part of the constructi­on, as well as changes in design to higher generation capacity.

Bekele explained further that there are three main reasons behind the delay in the GERD constructi­ons.The first reason is the contract which the Ethiopian government had signed with MeTEC company which he described has no experience. The MeTEC is a government­al company affiliated with the Ethiopian Ministry of Defence.

The second reason of delay according to Bekele is the discovery of a deep valley during constructi­ons, which delayed constructi­ons for three years. The plan of finalising the project within four years was not a real or successful plan, and this is the third reason for the delay, Bekele said.

In November 2017, Bekele told reporters that the GERD has no significan­t impact on downstream countries .“When Ethiopia says that GERD has no significan­t impact on downstream countries, this is not an unempirica­l pronouncem­ent, but a factual statement based on scientific research,” he added. Regarding the funding of the GERD, the Ethiopian minister noted that over $730m have been collected.

The GERD is expected to become Africa’s largest hydropower dam with a capacity of 6,450MW upon completion. Its constructi­on costs nearly $4bn.

 ??  ?? The GERD is under constructi­on in the Benishangu­l-Gumuz region of Ethiopia, on the Blue Nile River
The GERD is under constructi­on in the Benishangu­l-Gumuz region of Ethiopia, on the Blue Nile River

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