Ethiopia said yesterday it had attained its second-year target for filling a mega-dam on the Blue Nile River that has stoked tensions with downstream countries Egypt and Sudan.
“The first filling already was done last year. The second one is already done today. So today or tomorrow, second filling will be announced,” an official said, adding there is now enough water stored to begin producing energy.
Water Minister Seleshi Bekele later confirmed the milestone, which officials had earlier predicted would come in August. In a post on Twitter, he attributed the accelerated timeline to “extreme rainfall” in the Blue Nile basin.
The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) has been at the centre of a regional dispute ever since Ethiopia broke ground on the project in 2011.
Egypt and Sudan view the dam as a threat because of their dependence on Nile waters, while Ethiopia deems it essential for its electrification and development.
Talks held under the auspices of the African Union (AU) have failed to yield a three-way agreement on the dam’s filling and operations, and Cairo and Khartoum have demanded Addis Ababa cease filling the massive reservoir until such a deal is reached.
But Ethiopian officials have argued that filling is a natural part of the dam’s construction process and cannot be stopped.
The UN Security Council met earlier this month to discuss the project, although Ethiopia later slammed the session as an “unhelpful” distraction from the AU-led process. Egypt claims a historic right to the Nile dating from a 1929 treaty that gave it veto power over construction projects along the river. A 1959 treaty boosted Egypt’s allocation to around 66% of the river’s flow, with 22% for Sudan. Yet Ethiopia was not party to those treaties and does not see them as valid.
In 2010 Nile basin countries, excluding Egypt and Sudan, signed another deal, the Co-operative Framework Agreement, that allows projects on the river without Cairo’s agreement.
The Nile’s main tributaries, the Blue Nile and White Nile, converge in Khartoum before flowing north through Egypt to drain into the Mediterranean Sea.
The process of filling the GERD’s reservoir began last year, with Ethiopia announcing in July 2020 it had hit its target of 4.9bn cubic metres.
The goal for this year’s rainy season — which had been announced before the first cycle was completed — was to add 13.5bn cubic metres.
The reservoir’s capacity is 74bn. With the second-year target hit, the dam can run the first two of its 13 turbines, Seleshi said Monday on Twitter.
“Intensive efforts are being made for the two turbines to generate energy,” Seleshi said, adding that “early generation” could be realised “in the next few months.”
The $4.2bn dam is ultimately expected to produce more than 5,000 megawatts of electricity, making it Africa’s biggest hydroelectric dam and more than doubling Ethiopia’s electricity output.
Ethiopia had initially planned output of around 6,500 megawatts but later reduced its target.
The first two turbines should produce 750 megawatts of electricity, increasing national output by roughly 20%, said Addisu Lashitew of the Brookings Institution in Washington.
File photo taken on December 26, 2019, shows a worker go down a construction ladder at the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), near Guba in Ethiopia.