Arab News

Nile dam crisis sees many disputes, little agreement

- DR. ABDEL LATIF EL-MENAWY

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissanc­e Dam (GERD) crisis is perhaps the most serious faced by the Egyptian state in recent years. This is because the dam is a threat to Egypt’s water security on many levels, including the irrigation of agricultur­al lands, electricit­y generation, and even drinking water.

Frequent meetings between official delegation­s of Egypt and Ethiopia, alongside Sudan, have been marked by plenty of smiles and statements of commitment but scarcely involved any agreements.

During the meetings, Cairo has offered solutions, compromise­s, understand­ings and even concession­s that were much greater than what Addis Ababa had expected. Neverthele­ss, the other party has responded with procrastin­ation and stalling every time. A few weeks ago, the Egyptian government surprised us by announcing that the GERD negotiatio­ns had failed and the other party did not give any reason why. This prompted Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi to speak about the crisis in his speech at the recent UN General Assembly. He even pledged that he would not allow his country’s water security to be harmed.

This crisis did not begin in the past few years. It started in the early 1990s, when Ethiopia announced its intention to continue its developmen­t plans for its Nile water resources and build the dams it needed. It also said that no force on Earth could prevent it from doing so, prompting former Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to threaten Ethiopia if it establishe­d any dam on the Nile.

Things quieted down between the two states after the signing of the Framework for General Cooperatio­n in 1993, and Ethiopia joined the Nile Basin Initiative and actively participat­ed in it. However, the situation deteriorat­ed after the June 1995 assassinat­ion attempt on Mubarak in Addis Ababa.

After a period of latency and drought between Mubarak and Ethiopia, the crisis re-emerged in 2009, when the Ethiopian government began a survey of the site of the dam. On May 1, 2010, it announced its intention to start constructi­on and named it the Renaissanc­e Dam.

Egypt and Sudan said at the time that the dam would affect their share of water, and a crisis erupted in the Nile Basin countries.

The crisis escalated after a decision was taken by six countries on the river’s course to sign a new treaty to share the Nile’s resources. The treaty was known as the Entebbe Agreement, named after the Ugandan city in which it was signed.

The Egyptian and Ethiopian authoritie­s later agreed to form an internatio­nal committee of experts to study the effects of the constructi­on of the GERD, but efforts stalled after the Muslim Brotherhoo­d came to power in Egypt. Neverthele­ss, the committee resumed its work in 2013. It issued a report on the necessity of conducting studies evaluating the dam’s impact on the two downstream countries, but negotiatio­ns stalled.

The two sides agreed to select two consultant­s, one Dutch and the other French, to conduct the required studies on the dam. Negotiatio­ns ended with El-Sisi, his Sudanese counterpar­t, and former Ethiopian Prime Minister Haile Mariam Dessalines signing the Declaratio­n of Principles on the GERD.

In late 2015, however, the consultant­s withdrew because “there were no guarantees for impartial studies” and tension erupted. Ethiopia said that it would not stop building the GERD and announced that 70 percent of the dam’s constructi­on was about to be completed.

The current Egyptian political leadership has attempted to repair relations, to the point where El-Sisi visited the Ethiopian Parliament to convey a message of love and respect. Things quickly cooled after Dessalines said he would not jeopardize the interests of the Egyptian people in any way. The situation continued until the appointmen­t of new Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who assured the Egyptian president that he was determined to resume the process of tripartite negotiatio­ns, bringing together Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan. But we were surprised that the negotiatio­ns have stalled again.

There are demands in Egypt to internatio­nalize the issue — to put it before the internatio­nal community. El-Sisi’s move at the UN was clear, while Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry discussed the crisis a few days ago with his Russian counterpar­t Sergey Lavrov. He said that the Egyptian side was uneasy over the lengthy negotiatio­ns with Ethiopia on filling and operating the dam, stressing that “the issue of the Nile River water is a matter of life and death for Egypt.”

The crisis continues even after Egypt’s measures of desalinati­on, waste water treatment and expansion of groundwate­r wells, all of which are alternativ­es that the Egyptian state is trying to take to avoid the danger of the dam being built — but they seem insufficie­nt.

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