The diversion Ethiopia made on the Blue Nile in Guba, Ethiopia, as part
of its Grand Renaissance Dam. PHOTO | WILLIAM LLOYD GEORGE | AFP.
Addis Ababa,
Cell phone
batteries constantly dying, health centres bereft of modern equipment, a
dependence on flashlights after sundown -- Kafule Yigzaw experienced
all these struggles and more growing up without electricity in rural
Ethiopia.
So five years ago, he leapt at the chance to
work on a project designed to light up his country and the wider Horn of
Africa region: the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, a 145-metre-high,
1.8-kilometre-long concrete colossus that is set to become the largest
hydropower plant in Africa.
"Our country has a huge
problem with electricity," Kafule, 22, told AFP recently while taking a
break from reinforcing steel pipes that will funnel water from the Blue
Nile River to one of the dam's 13 turbines.
"This is about the existence of our nation and, in my opinion, it will help us break free from the bondage of poverty."
The dam is expected to begin producing energy by the end of this year.
Across Ethiopia, poor farmers and rich businessmen eagerly await
the more than 6,000 megawatts of electricity officials say it will
ultimately provide.
Yet as thousands of workers toil
day and night to finish the project, Ethiopian negotiators remain locked
in talks over how the dam will affect downstream neighbours,
principally Egypt.
The next round of negotiations
starts Thursday in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, and is likely to
renew focus on Cairo's fears that the dam could bring water and food
insecurity for millions of Egyptians.
Ethiopians at the
dam site say they are doing their best to focus on the task at hand,
though they bristle at suggestions that their country is overstepping in
its bid to harness the Blue Nile for its development.
"When
we do projects here it's not to harm the downstream countries," said
deputy project manager Ephrem Woldekidan. "There is no reason that the
downstream countries should complain (about) it because this is our
resource also."
The Nile River's two main tributaries
-- the Blue and White Niles -- converge in the Sudanese capital Khartoum
before flowing north through Egypt toward the Mediterranean Sea.
Egypt
depends on the Nile for about 90 percent of its irrigation and drinking
water, and says it has "historic rights" to the river guaranteed by
treaties from 1929 and 1959.
T
ensions have been high in the Nile basin ever since Ethiopia broke ground on the dam in 2011.
T
ensions have been high in the Nile basin ever since Ethiopia broke ground on the dam in 2011.
The
International Crisis Group warned last March that the countries "could
be drawn into conflict" given that Egypt sees potential water loss as
"an existential threat".
In October, Ethiopian Prime
Minister Abiy Ahmed, fresh from winning the Nobel Peace Prize, assured
lawmakers that "no force can stop Ethiopia from building the dam" and
said "millions" of troops could be mobilised to defend it if necessary.
The
United States stepped in to jumpstart a tripartite dialogue with Sudan
that is supposed to resolve the dispute by January 15.
The
biggest initial hurdle is the filling of the dam's reservoir, which can
hold 74 billion cubic metres of water. Egypt is worried Ethiopia will
fill the reservoir too quickly, reducing water flow downstream.
After
the latest round of talks in Sudan last month, Sudanese irrigation
minister Yasser Abbas said there had been "progress" on the issue but no
breakthrough.
Kevin Wheeler, an engineer at the
University of Oxford who has studied the dam, said he was hopeful a deal
on the filling period could be reached by January 15, but that
additional issues would emerge down the line.
"Coordinated
operations between the reservoirs along the Nile are likely to be an
ongoing discussion that may continue for years, decades, and centuries
to come, particularly as populations grow, development continues, and
global climate patterns continue to change," Wheeler said.
Thousands
of farmers have allegedly been displaced since work on the dam began.
The US-based NGO International Rivers has accused Ethiopia of
disregarding the dam's environmental impacts, which remain understudied.
The
group has voiced concern about "great degradation" that, along with
changing weather patterns due to climate change, could "result in
irregular episodes of flooding, drought and mudslides".
Ethiopia
has responded to such statements by noting that a study group including
experts from Ethiopia, Egypt and Sudan has been tasked with assessing
social and environmental impacts.
Meanwhile, officials in Addis Ababa are focusing on the country's push for power.
Ethiopia
is striving for universal electricity access by 2025, though currently
more than half the population of 110 million lives without it.
Even
in Addis, power is patchy, and the city suffered weeks of blackouts
during the most recent period of electricity rationing in May and June
2019.
Dawit Moges, head of a medical laboratory, said
the cuts drove up his generator costs and, because they were not
predictable, led to delayed results and unreliable blood sample
readings.
"You've collected specimens, you're
processing the specimens and boom, there is no power. All those
specimens, you may not be sure about the results," he said, adding that
he hoped the dam would yield a steady power supply.
"I want it to be completed as soon as possible and go into production."
The
same is true for Harsh Kothari, head of Mohan Group, which runs five
manufacturing units producing everything from shoes to electric cables
and barbed wire.
Reliable electricity would make his business "a lot more competitive" and enable it to grow, Kothari said.
Back
at the dam site, this kind of talk about how the project could fuel
prosperity from farms to factories across Ethiopia is exactly what
motivates Workey Tadele, a radio operator, to go to work every day.
"We're working here for the benefit of our country," she said. "If we have electricity, then we'll have a better future."
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