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Egypt, EU discuss developments of Ethiopia’s Nile dam

The new GERD dam is operational. PHOTO @FitsumAdela

Ethiopia announced operation of the first two turbines of its multi-billion-dollar hydropower dam to generate electricity

Cairo, Egypt | Xinhua | Egypt’s Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Aty held talks in Cairo with visiting European Union’s special envoy for the Horn of Africa Annette Weber on the developments of Ethiopia’s grand dam built on the Nile River.

During the meeting, the two officials discussed the current situation of tripartite negotiations between Egypt, Sudan, and their upstream counterpart Ethiopia regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), said the Egyptian Water Ministry in a statement on Wednesday.

Abdel-Aty highlighted “the great flexibility shown by Egypt during the various stages of negotiation due to its desire to reach an agreement and build confidence,” according to the statement.

He added that achieving cooperation requires “political will and seriousness” on the part of Ethiopia to reach an agreement regarding the filling and operation of the GERD.

The Egyptian minister stressed that “reaching an agreement on the GERD would pave the way for achieving regional cooperation and integration.”

For her part, Weber said the EU seeks to advance negotiations regarding the Ethiopian dam with a bid to reach an agreement that satisfies all parties and guarantees the stability and development of all concerned countries.

The EU envoy urged reaching a tripartite agreement that would also meet the requirements of regional integration through the interconnection between water and energy, infrastructure and trade in light of climate change.

Ethiopia started building the dam in 2011, while Egypt is concerned it might affect its 55.5-billion-cubic-meter annual share of the Nile water and Sudan is also worried about its 18.5-billion-cubic-meter annual share.

Decade-long tripartite negotiations failed to reach an agreement regulating the filling and operation of the dam, including those mediated by the United States and the African Union.

In February, Ethiopia announced it began operation of the first two turbines of its multi-billion-dollar hydropower dam to generate electricity. Egypt, in response, sent a new letter to the United Nations Security Council to protest the move.

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Xinhua

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