Ethiopia downplays Sudan’s threats over Nile dam

Horn of African nation plans to go ahead with $5B hydro dam filling despite objections from downstream countries
Ethiopia on Tuesday said it is
futile to respond to each threat posed by the downstream countries concerning
the ongoing construction of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).
During a weekly press briefing,
Ethiopia’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Ambassador Dina Mufti said: “It won’t be
wise to respond to every threat coming from Sudan. Threats coming from the
downstream countries have never been new. They threatened to even bomb the dam
in the past.”
Sudanese Irrigation Minister
Yasser Abbas last Friday said that if Ethiopia was to go ahead with the
second-year filling of the dam, it would bring the matter to the UN Security
Council.
Sudan and Egypt have been calling
for a “comprehensive agreement” before the filling, while Ethiopia maintains a
guideline would be enough as provided for in the 2015 Declaration of Principles
that gave Ethiopia the prerogative to carry on with the construction of the
GERD while participating in a tripartite dialogue.
“Failure to reach an agreement paves the way for
raising a complaint to the Security Council, considering that the GERD poses a
real threat to regional peace and security,” Abbas said, adding that Sudan
would also sue the GERD contractor, the globally renowned Salini Costruttori.
Ethiopia began construction of its
$5-billion hydro dam on the Nile in 2011 to boost the nation’s electricity
generation and alleviate poverty. More than 60% of Ethiopia’s 110 million
population live in the dark without electricity.
Egypt and Sudan say they fear the
dam would reduce the flow of water downstream and affect their “historical
water rights” according to a water-sharing treaty the two countries signed in 1959
that gave Egypt 55.5 billion cubic meters (bcm) water and Sudan 18.5 bcm, while
excluding Ethiopia which never ratified this bilateral agreement between Sudan
and Egypt.
Ethiopia maintains that it direly
needs electricity for its national development to provide much-needed energy to
homes and local industries as well as for exports to neighboring countries.
Last month, trilateral talks among
the countries on the rules and guidelines of the filling and annual operation
of the dam under the auspices of the African Union did not succeed. The two
sticking points were about the amount of water Ethiopia should release
downstream from the 70-bcm capacity reservoir during drought periods as well as
mechanisms to resolve future disputes.
Dina said the two downstream countries of Egypt and Sudan have been active to take the talks out of the African Union.