Ethiopia, Sudan & Egypt Can’t Afford to Remain at Loggerheads over GERD

Addis Ababa April 14/2021 (ENA) Ethiopia, Sudan &Egypt Can’t Afford to Remain at Loggerheads over GERD
The Sudan and Egypt lack no
knowledge of the scientific and non negotiable facts pertaining to the
technical standards upon which GERD is being constructed. Ethiopia strictly
adheres to legal and technical standards in the construction of GERD not only
because it is obliged to abide to normative international laws and principles
on utilization of Trans-boundary Rivers but is also a guarantee for insuring
optimum utilization of hydroelectric power from the dam.
This implies that both Egypt and
Sudan need to look at the big picture surrounding the dam. Ethiopia shall never
refrain from believing and acting on the utilization of the Blue Nile in the
most equitable and rational manner. The Ethiopian government and its
negotiating team have repeatedly stressed that filling GERD is not a new
undertaking outside the realms of the technical construction of the dam. There
would not have been any point in starting the construction of a dam which would
remain empty.
In his recent interview with Al
Jazeera English, Sudan’s Water Resources Minister Yasser Abas said Sudan’s
position on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) has never changed from
the beginning. This was not really so as Sudan was repeatedly swinging between
remaining in the negotiations and at time boycotting it. “Sudan’s position has
never changed from the beginning we support the dam,” the minister said. Indeed
Ethiopia accepts such an official recognition of the country’s right to build
hydropower dams for hydropower generation.
“And the second thing is that we are seeing some
benefits from this dam. Of course, it has also negative impacts but also it has
positive impacts,” the minister added.
“Now, the issue is that all these positive
impacts can change automatically to very high risk if there is no agreement.
So, our point is the same, we are supporting Ethiopia, but on the condition to
reach agreement on filling and operation,” Yasir pointed out.
As Ethiopia’s Minister of Water,
Irrigation and Energy has repeatedly confirmed, Ethiopia has no problem in
reaching on a negotiated agreement and does not accept one sided and binding
agreement that does not correspond with the reality on the ground and is not
interested in politicizing and over politicizing on Ethiopia’s efforts to
provide electric power to its citizens.
Again, Ethiopia has time and again
noted that it would accept the role of the Quartet mediation as long as they
remain on observer status while, AU as a leading regional African organization
will remain the custodian of amicable negotiations among the three countries.
Ethiopia firmly believes in the
capability of Africans to solve their problems by themselves through the AU led
negotiation and the second filling of GERD will go ahead as scheduled during
the country’s rainy season.
On yet another development former
Sudan Irrigation and Water Resources Minister Osman Atum said second phase
filling of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) poses no impact on the
water resource of Sudan,
Atum, who has worked for 49 years
on issues related to dam, told Sky News Arabia that the presumed threats of
GERD on Egypt and Sudan are mostly erroneous.
He added that even third phase
filling of the dam has no harm or negative impact on the lower riparian
countries. The dam’s benefit to the down-stream countries incomparably exceeds
compared to the expected harm, the former minister said.
Had the individuals from Sudan and
Egypt talking about the dam on media outlets been experts, they could have
provided accurate information, he says. There was above average water flow and
flood over the last five years, Atum stated, adding that about 24 billion cubic
meter water had been accumulated in the Aswan High Dam last year alone.
Moreover, he alleged that
Ethiopia’s plan to fill the dam with 13.5 and 10.5 billion cubic meter water in
the 2nd and 3rd phase respectively will not impact Sudan’s water share. Egypt
has repeatedly stated that it will not accept Ethiopia’s filling of the dam
without a binding agreement in anticipation that it will reduce its share of
the water supply.
But, the former minister pointed
out that the dam through a sustained annual flow of 48 billion cubic meters
will have paramount importance whenever there is drought in Sudan and Egypt.
The dam will able to generate 48 billion cubic meters of water flowing to the
downstream countries of Sudan and Egypt, he added.
The Foreign Ministers of Ethiopia,
Sudan and Egypt held talks on GERD in Kinshasa, but they failed to reach an
agreement and negotiations were concluded without an agreement between the
three countries.
Ethiopia wants the negotiations to
continue under the auspices of Africa as every African problem has African
solutions, while Egypt and Sudan are calling for the quartet of negotiations to
include other parties.
Indeed contrary to the assertions
of Sudan’s water Resources Minister, vacillations on the most important points
of the negotiations, combining a wave of misinformation with saber rattling as
well as interference into the internal affairs of Ethiopia blended with
propaganda war on the country on the part of Egypt and Sudan has done a greater
disservice to the continuation of negotiations under the leadership of the AU.
Some basic issues need to be clear here. The current threat being fanned by Egypt would only help to tarnish the thousands of friendly relations between the three countries and indeed pointless and counterproductive. The second point is that Ethiopia will definitely engage in the second filling of GERD consequently generating a substantial amount of electric power in the first phase. Ethiopia calls for constructive negotiations under the auspices of the AU to resolve African problems in African way in line with the lofty goals of Pan-Africansim.