Washington,
Ministers
from Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan agreed on Wednesday to reconvene in
Washington later this month to finalise an agreement on a giant
hydropower dam on the Blue Nile that sparked a diplomatic crisis between
Cairo and Addis Ababa.
The ministers
met in Washington this week and agreed to fill the $4 billion Grand
Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) in stages during the wet season, taking
into account the impact on downstream reservoirs, the US Treasury
Department, which hosted the meeting, said in a joint statement with the
countries and the World Bank.
Initial
filling of the dam, due to begin in July, will aim for a level of 595
metres above sea level and early electricity generation, while providing
appropriate mitigation measures for Egypt and Sudan during severe
droughts, the statement said.
The
ministers will hold technical and legal talks ahead of their January
28-29 meeting in Washington, where they plan to finalise the agreement,
the statement said.
Cairo fears the
dam, announced in 2011 and under construction on the Blue Nile near
Ethiopia’s border with Sudan, will restrict supplies of already scarce
Nile waters on which its population of more than 100 million people is
almost entirely dependent.
Addis Ababa denies the dam will undermine
Egypt’s access to water and says the project is crucial to its economic
development, as it aims to become Africa’s biggest power exporter with a
projected capacity of more than 6,000 megawatts.
The
three regional powers convened in Washington for the third time on
Monday, aiming to reach a deal before Wednesday’s deadline the nations
had agreed to following a November meeting with US Treasury Secretary
Steven Mnuchin and World Bank President David Malpass.
Previous
meetings ended without agreement, with Egypt voicing concern that
Ethiopia had not offered sufficient guarantees that filling the dam
would be slowed during droughts.
Meetings
in Addis Ababa last week ended in deadlock as Ethiopia said Egypt had
proposed filling the dam over an extended period of 12-21 years, and
that this was unacceptable.
However,
Egypt said it had not specified the number of years over which the dam’s
reservoir should be filled, and that an earlier, stage-based process
agreed on by the countries would lead to a filling period of six to
seven years under normal conditions.
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