Will Ethiopia’s ‘grand’ new dam steal Nile waters from Egypt? Africa’s largest hydropower project, a new 6,000-megawatt dam on the Blue Nile, has sparked a row between Egypt and Ethiopia. But it could increase the overall water flow in the Nile By William Davison, Christian Science Monitor June 27, 2013 Egypt is Egypt and the Nile are bound together: The Nile, called “God’s gift to But Ethiopia – the source of almost 86 percent of the water flowing to Egypt – Ethiopia two years ago started building what will be Africa’s largest dam on Ethiopia says its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, 20 miles from the Sudanese Yet Ethiopia’s decision on how quickly or slowly to fill a needed reservoir After heated rhetoric, including military threats by Egypt and an unbending Ethiopia aims to fill the needed new dam reservoir quickly, in five years, to To divert water into the new reservoir quickly, especially in low-rain years, Long-term strategy Yet in the long run, the Nile water can be conserved by moving storage away As for evaporation rates, no consensus or exact science exists. But more usage When it is filled, Ethiopia’s new reservoir or artificial lake will be about Last month, Italian dam builder Salini Costrutorri hosted a ceremony to mark the diversion of the Flash point: the filling of the reservoir While that step raised ire in Egypt, it is more the reservoir filling that is a The volume of water to be captured in the reservoir is 74 billion cubic meters If Ethiopia decided unilaterally to fill the reservoir as quickly as possible, The Ethiopian ministry of water and energy says it wants to fill the reservoir To fill the dam over a six-year period would mean 14 to 18 percent less Nile Experts say that idea may not be so simple. It is unlikely that water can be Ethiopia’s Blue Nile, for example, has run as high as 70 bcm “They will draw ‘excess’ water during the wet season,” Mr. Langan says. “With some proactive management, Most of the Blue Nile’s flow follows a three-month rainy season in the Filling the dam only during rainy season in wet years would mean “the But that approach could take decades, argues Paul Block, an expert on from The approach to capturing water needs to be “flexible” depending on Unpredictable future rainfull patterns complicate a If Ethiopia fills the dam with 25 percent flow of the Blue Nile per year, the Michael Hammond, a hydrologist from Exeter University in the UK, says such “My understanding is that if the impoundment is managed and operated well, Evaporation rates can be managed by small-scale conservation and reduce the
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