Sudan support new Ethiopian dam on Blue Nile
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By Tesfa-Alem Tekle

June 18, 2011 (ADDIS ABABA) – The outgoing Sudanese Ambassador to
Ethiopia, Muhidin Salim Ahmed Ibrahim, said that the Sudanese
community there support the hydropowered dam the Horn of Africa
country intends to build on the Blue Nile.

Ibrahim made the remarks at a farewell ceremony in the presence of
Ethiopia’s President Girma Woldegiorgis, on Friday after concluding
his four-year term in Ethiopia.

Ambassador Ibrahim said that during his tenure, he has put all efforts
to further strengthen the long-standing historic ties and cooperation
between the two countries.

The Ethiopian President, Woldegiorgis, on the occasion expressed
appreciation for the role the outgoing Ambassador played to accelerate
social, economic and political ties between Khartoum and Addis Ababa.

The president also commended efforts made by the ambassador to advance
the Ethiopia-Sudan joint ministerial talks to head-of-state level.

Ethiopia has recently launched a 5,250 Mega Watt hydropower plant on
the BLue Nile River in Benishangul-Gumuz region, very close to the
Sudanese border. The 80 billion birr ($4.76 billion) project will
solely be funded by Ethiopia, partially through the sale of government
bonds.

Despite protests from Sudan and Egypt, Ethiopia has insisted on
carrying out the project with or without external financial funds.

Ethiopian authorities argue that the project’s environmental impact on
local populations is minimal and any effect can easily be mitigated.
Upon completion the country has plans to export power to neighboring
countries including Sudan, Egypt and Djibouti.

“There is no doubt that Sudan and Egypt will also benefit largely from
the project through water conservation. Evaporation levels will drop
significantly, and sedimentation will also fall. It will provide a
valuable regulation of water flow in a period of climate change,
improve prospects of navigation and provide power for the Nile valley”
Ethiopia’s Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister, Hailemariam
Desalegn said at a recent monthly press conference.

Ethiopia has the second-largest hydropower potential in Africa after
the Democratic Republic of Congo however it has only managed to use
3.5 percent of it potential so far.

The horn of Africa nation, says the international community should
support such projects in Africa stressing the importance of developing
infrastructure in the continent and of its value for
industrialisation.

Africa had only been able to exploit no more than 5 percent of its
hydropower potential compared with over 70 percent in Europe and North
America.

(ST)

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