Why is Egypt worried about Ethiopia's dam on the Nile?

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Workers at the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance DamImage source, Getty Images

Egypt has accused Ethiopia of threatening its supply of water from the River Nile.

Ethiopia has confirmed that it has finished filling the reservoir at its giant new dam, which uses water from the Nile.

What is Ethiopia's giant dam project?

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (Gerd) is on the Blue Nile tributary in the northern Ethiopia highlands, from where 85% of the Nile's waters flow.

Gerd is 19 miles (30km) south of the border with Sudan and is Africa's biggest hydroelectric dam project. It is more than a mile long and 145m high.

It is not quite complete yet, but has already involved 12 years of construction.

The reservoir behind the $4.2bn (£3.8bn) dam has a surface area the size of Greater London.

How will the dam help Ethiopia?

Ethiopia wants the dam to produce electricity for the 60% of its population, external who currently have no supply.

It is hoped this will eventually double Ethiopia's electricity output, provide businesses with constant electricity supplies and boost development.

It could also provide electricity for neighbouring countries including Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya, Djibouti and Eritrea.

Why are Egypt and Sudan upset about the dam?

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Egypt is worried that the dam will reduce water levels on the Nile

Egypt, with a population of about 107 million people, relies on the River Nile for nearly all of its fresh water.

It needs it for households and agriculture - especially for growing cotton, which requires a lot of water.

Nile water is also used to fill Lake Nasser, the reservoir for Egypt's own hydro-electric power plant, the Aswan High Dam.

Sudan, with a population of 48 million people, is also heavily reliant on water from the Nile.

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"Ethiopia's unilateral measures are considered a disregard for the interests and rights of the downstream countries and their water security," Egypt's foreign ministry said, external.

It has argued that a 2% reduction in water from the Nile could result in the loss of 200,000 acres of irrigated land.

Egypt is also concerned that in times of drought, Ethiopia might fill the reservoir behind its dam with water, to increase its generating capacity, instead of letting it flow downstream.

"There is no agreement on how Gerd should be managed during and following periods of drought," says Mohammed Basheer of the University of Toronto. "Without an agreement, Ethiopia might adopt an approach that maximizes electricity generation following droughts, by first recovering storage, which would be unfavourable for Egypt."

Ethiopia filled the dam over the course of three years, dismissing Egypt's argument that it should take 12 to 21 years as unacceptable.

Although Sudan is as affected by water levels on the Nile as Egypt is, its response to the dam has been restricted by conflict in the country.

Can an agreement be reached over the dam's future?

The dam has been a source of disagreement between the countries since its construction began in 2011.

A treaty from 1929, external (as well as another treaty from 1959) gave Egypt and Sudan rights to almost all the Nile's water.

It also gave them the right to veto projects by countries upstream (such as Ethiopia) that would deprive them of their share of water.

Ethiopia said it should not be bound by these old treaties, and it decided to start building the dam during the Arab Spring, when there was political turmoil in Egypt.

Egypt, Sudan and Ethiopia signed a new treaty in 2015, but talks over how Ethiopia uses Nile water to fill the dam have repeatedly broken down.

In 2019, the International Crisis Group - an organisation which works to prevent wars - warned that armed conflict was possible, external.

The US intervened in 2019, to try and reach an agreement between Egypt and Ethiopia, but with little success.

Talks only restarted three weeks before Ethiopia announced it had finished filling the dam.