Politics of Nile Basin
Politics of Nile Basin
Politics of Nile Basin
ELIAS ASHEBIR
DECLARATION
Elias Ashebir
May 2009
2
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgment.............................. VI
Abstract ................................... VII
Introduction................................ VIII
Chapter I
A Brief Survey of the Nile Basin
1. General overview 1-3
2. Exploration of the Nile
3. Geographical & Hydrological Feature of the
Nile Basin 3-4
3.1 The Blue Nile 4
3.2 The White Nile 4-9
Chapter II
The Nile Riparian Countries & Future Challenges
1. Subsystems of the Nile Basin 10
1.1 The White Nile Subsystem 11
1.2 The Abbay (Blue Nile) Subsystem 11-12
1.3 The Tekeze (Atbara) Subsystem 12
1.4 The Baro-Akobo (Sobat) Subsystem 12-13
Chapter III
Legal aspects of the use of the Nile waters
Chapter IV
From confrontation to cooperation: a new trend and
perspective
1. Factors hindering cooperation in the Nile Basin.... 89-90
2. Common challenges ................................. 90-92
3. The evaluation of cooperative spirit in the
Nile Basin ........................................ 93-99
4. A Major departure towards cooperation in the
Nile Basin
4.1 Economics of the Nile ......................... 99-103
4.2 NBI-common platform for sustainable development 103-
105
4.3 Shared Vision Programme ......................105-107
4.4 Subsidiary Action Programmes .............. 107-110
4.5 The role of the Nile issues dialogue forum ...110-112
4.6 The Nile Basin and the international community 112-
115
4.7 The required Win Win formula in the basin.....115-118
Chapter V
Conclusion and Recommendations ...................... 119-
121
Bibliography ...................................... 122-
126
Annexure A.- Basic statistic of the Nile Basin
Annexure B.- Map of the Nile Basin
5
INTRODUCTION
The Nile basin is the largest international river system in the world. This river system is
composed of two major tributaries: the White Nile and the Blue Nile which originate from
Lake Victoria (Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda) and Lake Tana (Ethiopia) respectively.
These two major tributaries converge at Khartoum to form the Main Nile which continues
on to Egypt. The Blue Nile is by for the largest tributary in terms of contribution 3 to the in-
flow of the water (86%) and the White Nile share is only 14%.
The Nile waters present both opportunities and challenges to the riparian countries. In view
of this, the thesis tries to analyze the historical, geo-political and legal aspects of the Basin.
The socio-economic factors that contribute to the Silent dispute among riparian countries
will also be examined from both upstream and downstream countries perspectives.
The willingness to forge technical cooperation among riparian states was weak until 1960s.
However due to the rising population and development needs in the fields of agriculture,
industry and energy in the riparian countries coupled with De-Colonization of some countries
in the Basin, that were under British rule, the need has arisen to review of old treaties. In this
respect, an attempt will be made to critically look into the pros and cons of these treaties.
The Methodologies of the paper are mainly an extensive literature review including legal
documents and critical analysis. Descriptive as well as narrative elaboration of the Nile
Basin and its tributaries are also part of the methodology. Moreover, I have conducted
interviews with prominent personalities who are authority on the Nile issues.
Among these authoritative personalities, I should firstly mention the extensive discussions I
conducted with Dr David Gray, Leader of the Nile Team in World Bank. This discussion
played a very important role in shaping my theme and the issues I covered in the Chapters
of the paper. Dr. Gray continues to play an active part in facilitating negotiations among the
riparian states for a future basin organization and cooperative projects being undertaken by
them.
3 Swain, Ashok (1997) Ethiopia, the Sudan and Egypt: The Nile River Dispute, The Journal of Modern Africa Studies,
35.4, pp 675-694
6
I have also undertaken interviews and field research in the some of the basin states as part of
the methodology of the paper. For this purpose, I conducted constructive discussions and
interviews with some prominent intellectuals in Ethiopia. The scholars and prominent
personalities interviewed include Mr. Kifle Wodajo, Professor Richard Punkrust and Mr.
Zewde G/Hiwot with a traditional title of Dejazmach. These personalities were relevant for
the research as they could easily identify important historical events and their implications
for cooperation on the Nile.
Finally, the methodology of work included field visits to gather information containing legal
and historical documents on the Nile at University of Makarere in Uganda, University of
Cairo, and University of Addis Ababa. I have also undertaken a research work with a local
NGO called Interafrica Group. I was also provided access to some of the relevant
documentation at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. I also used information from other river
basin organizations such as the Mekong River Basin and from the experience of waster
sharing arrangement between South Africa and Lesotho.
7
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
First and foremost, I would like to express my sincere gratitude and appreciation to my
supervisor Mr. Larry Benjamin, lecturer at the University of Wits, for his generous support
and comments which were consistently given to me till the end of this research. His
constructive criticism and advice during the research have been extremely vital in the
finalization of this work.
I am also grateful to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Federal Democratic Republic of
Ethiopia for providing me with necessary fund and timely support to pursue my study in the
University.
My deepest thanks goes to my wife, Azeb Teshome, for her uninterrupted moral support
which is considered as one of the main factors to my success. I am also indebted to The
Ford Foundation for its Cooperation and generosity in funding the research. Last but not
least, my deepest thanks goes to Mrs. Mignonne Bekhti and Aster Tadele for their valuable
contribution in typing the research.
8
ABSTRACT
The Nile Basin Countries are abundantly endowed with natural water resources which have
been the cause of both conflict and cooperation among the riparian countries. There are ten1
riparian countries in the Basin with different contributions to the over all flow of the water.
It is possible to say that this transboundary river is indestructible natural bind for countries
in the Basin whose catchments area2 is over 3 million km2.
The Nile river, if equitably distributed among the riparian countries, wouldn't have triggered tension
in relations between its riparians. On the basis of historical facts on how the river has been utilized
and the slow pace to shift from confrontation to cooperation, this study attempts to reveal the
hindrances not to share this vast water resource equitably between riparians for ages. It is believed
that the unprecedented demands of the upper riparian countries to utilize the water equitably is an
indication that it is a right time to come up with an agreement on the utilization of the resource by
all riparians.
The expansion of the Sahara Desert towards South, the recurrent drought and the trend of
population growth in the region are considered to be the legitimate causes for these
countries to demand equitable distribution of this water resource.
In view of this, an attempt will be made to identify the key elements needed to ensure
equitable utilization of the water, not only to alleviate the riparians growing economic
problems and political conflicts, but also as an instrument of political harmonization and
long range integration of the basin.
1 The Riparian countries are: Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Brundi, Rwanda, Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya,
Tanzania, Sudan and Egypt
2 Transboundary River/Lake Basin Water Development in Africa: Prospects, problem, and achievements,
Dec. 2000 P. 19
9
CHAPTER ONE
1. General Overview
In terms of its length, drainage area and number of riparian countries, the Nile River is one
of the largest in the world (see Table 1)4. With an area of 3.1 million km2, the Nile Basin
covers about 10% of Africa and 2.3% of the world's land5 surface. The Nile River is the
longest river in the world. It flows6 6,700 km from its source in the Equatorial lake basin to
the Mediterranean Sea, north of Cairo, Egypt. Although7 the upstream rainfall is 2000
billion cubic meters yearly, 7% of this immense quantity flows to the down stream
countries.
Table 1 - Major International River Basins in Africa
No. of Basin Area
Basin Basin States
States 000km_
Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Rwanda,
Nile 10 3130
Burundi, Democratic Republic of Congo, Eritrea
Democratic Republic of Congo, Central African Republic,
Zaïre 9 2850 Angola, Republic of Congo, Zambia, Tanzania, Cameroon,
Burundi, Rwanda
Niger, Nigeria, Mali, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire,
Niger 9 180
Benin, Cameroon, Chad
Zambia, Angola, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Botswana,
Zambezi 8 1420
Tanzania, Namibia
Volta 6 390 Ghana, Burkina Faso, Cote d'Ivoire, Togo, Benin, Mali
Orange 4 950 South Africa, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho
Senegal 4 340 Senegal, Mauritania, Mali, Guinea
Limpopo 4 385 South Africa, Botswana, Mozambique, Zimbabwe
4 Source: Tvedt, Terje, The management of Water & Irrigation. The Blue Nile; eds, M. Doornobous et al.
5 Mohamoda, Dahilon Yasin (2003) Nile Basin Cooperation: A Review of the Literature, Current African Issues No.
26, Nordiska Afikaninstitutet.
6 Transbondary River/Lake Basin water Development in Africa: Prospects, Problem and Achievements, Dec. 2000 P.19
7 EL-SADEQ EL-MAHDI, Nile water, The Promise and the Treat, Oct. 2000 p.
10
The ten riparian states of the Nile Basin are Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania,
Democratic Republic of the Congo, Kenya, Ethiopia, Eritrea, Sudan and Egypt. The
basin cuts across several climatic zones as well as a number of racial and religious
boundaries. A. Moorehead describes the boundaries of the Blue Nile as follows:
"No one crosses this border with impunity. When the Arab invades Ethiopia his camels
die in the mountains and he himself loses heart, in the fearful cold. When the Ethiopian
comes down into the desert his mules collapse in the appalling heat, and he is soon
driven back to the hills for the lack of water. It is the conflict between two absolutely
different forms of life, and even religion seems unable to make a bridge since
Christianity falters as soon as it reaches the desert and Islam has never really been
powerful in the mountains. Only the river binds these two conflicting worlds together."8
The Nile has fascinated philosophers, geographers, historians, engineers and politicians
of all creeds for many centuries. Before man first set eyes on the Nile River four
thousand years ago, major civilizations had already been flourished there. The Nile
enabled ancient civilizations to flourish in its linear reaches in Egypt. In its upper and
middle reaches at Meroe and Axum this stream was believed to be a holy river, revered
as the God Hapi.9 Greek philosophers were intrigued by the Nile. They believed its
origin was not like that of other rivers but it had been created along with the world. The
mystery of the Nile lies not only in its source, but in the predictability on the rise and
fall of its flood. Tales of Miletos, the chief of the seven wise men of ancient Greece,
believed that the northerly Etesian winds with their constant blows held back the Nile
before releasing the pent up giant to enter the Mediterranean. Herodotus rejected this
theory as Sinica did. It was due to the lack of coincidence between the onset and dying
of the wind and the Nile flood. Two centuries after Herodotus, Erotoshenes (276 - 194
BC) described the Nile source much more accurately separating the White and Blue
Niles and describing its source as a lake fed by summer rains.
8 Bruce, J., Travels to Discover the Sources of the Nile, Vol.2 (London, 1790) P.525
9 Yamia, A.M.: "The Nile Basin: lessons from the past", in Asit K. Bismans (ed.), International Waters of the Middle
East: from Euphrates-tigras to Nile Bombay, 1994 p.156
11
However, this was not before early Greek geographers such as Hecatios of Miletas who
pictured the world surrounded by oceans from which the major rivers such as the Nile,
the Euphrates, the Tigris and the Indus were fed. Other theories on the source of the
Nile suggested that its locations were in Libya and they connected the Nile to the Niger
River in West Africa. Ptolemy, the Roman Astronomer and geographer who resided in
Alexandria in the second century AD, prepared a remarkable map of the Nile Basin
showing the three lakes (Tana, Victoria and Albert) with the main source of the White
Nile in the snow capped mountains of the Ruwenzore Range, which was then mystified
as the mountains of the moon. Aerchylus in the year 500 BC talked about Egypt as a
country nurtured by the snows.10
As recently as 1905, McMillan's expedition was able to follow only about two fifth of
the river. McMillan tried to navigate the river in a steel boat but almost drowned at the
very outset. In 1923, the top of the canyon was traveled by an expedition led by R.E
Cheesman. The local historians, chroniclers, priests, and ordinary peasants also played a
more significant role in the discovery of the source of the Blue Nile. Ancient
10 Howell, P.P. and Allan, J.A.: The Nile. University of London. 1990 p.15
12
civilizations spread in the banks of the great Nile Rivers. The Nile Basin sheltered not
only the ancient Egyptian civilization (3100 BC), but also (Meroe 656 BC - AD 320). It
covered the Cush and (an early iron making center), early Christian and Muslim States
in the southern part of Egypt and the northern Sudan; and Kmydams such as Buyanda,
established during the 17th century in East Africa. Many smaller social and political
units also unified the peoples of the Nile Basin.
13
George, Edward, Albert. The last lake in the chain, from which the river emerges, is
Lake Albert. In the Equatorial Lakes area, the White Nile is known as the Victoria Nile,
the Kyoga Nile, and the Albert Nile, each bearing the name of its feeder lake, from
south to north in the direction of its flow. The Bahr El Jebel, which originates in the
southern tip of Sudan then spills into the Sudd wetlands, creating one of the world's
greatest expanses of fresh-water swampland.
The Bahr El Jebel winds its way through the Sudd and combines with the Bahr El
Ghazal and other small tributaries before leaving the Sudd wetlands region. Just as it
flows out of the Sudd, upstream from the town of Malakal, it is joined and strengthened
by the Sobat River, which flows westward from the mountains of southwest Ethiopia.
From here on, the river is known as the White Nile. The White Nile then joins the Blue
Nile at Khartoum, Sudan. The Nile River proper is not just the summation of the White
Nile and the Blue Nile. Due to the different hydrological characteristics of these two
rivers (in quantity, seasonal variation and distribution of flows, sediment transport,
dissolved and suspended material, etc.), the Nile River is largely dominated by the
much more voluminous and vibrant flow characteristics of the Blue Nile.
The last big tributary of the Nile River is the Atbara River, which flows northwest from
the northern mountains of Ethiopia. The Atbara River joins the Nile some 180 km north
of Khartoum. Some experts assume that the Mereb-Gash Rivers to be tributaries of the
Atbara, suggesting that they drain into the Atbara by underground flow; therefore, they
consider them as part of the Nile system.11 Since average annual rainfall decreases
significantly along the northward course of the Nile (from 1,800 mm in the Equatorial
Lakes and in the Ethiopian mountains to less than 25 mm in Egypt), there is no more
inflow to the Nile downstream from the confluence of the Atbara River and the Nile
itself. Although the White Nile is longer than the Blue Nile, its contribution to the mean
annual flow of the Nile River is only 14 %.12 Were it not for the very high evaporation
11 Jovanovic, D.: "The Ethiopian interests in the diversion of Nile river waters." Water International. 1985 p. 82-85.
12 Waterbury, J.: "Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley." Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. 1979 p. 23
14
and spill-over losses in the Sudd wetlands, the White Nile's contribution would have
almost been doubled. The Blue Nile, on the other hand, contributes 59 % of the mean
annual flow to Aswan Dam.13
The seasonal distributions of the two rivers are different too. The White Nile has more
or less regular flows throughout the year (again, mainly because of the natural
regulation effect of the Sudd), while the Blue Nile is highly irregular, with about 60%
of its annual flow coming during the flood period of July through September. With
regard to sediment transport, the White Nile has more suspended material, while the
Blue Nile is abundant with fertile silt from the highlands of Ethiopia. Among the main
tributaries of the Nile River are the Sobat and the Atbara, which generate considerable
flows from the Ethiopian mountains. The Atbara River also drains portions of
southwestern Eritrea.
Table 1.1 Summary of the flow contributions of the Nile riparian countries to the Nile
River, as measured at Aswan.
Nile Riparian Country Mean Annual Flow Contribution % of Total
(as measured at Aswan) Bill.
Cubic Meters (BCM)
a. Egypt 0 0
b. Sudan Negligible 0
c. Ethiopia 72.24 86
d. Upper White Nile Riparian
11.76 14
Countries
Total 84 100
13 ibid p. 23
15
In the simplest hydrological terms, the cycle of the Nile Basins is the evaporation by
solar energy of the water of the South Atlantic, the taking away of moisture across more
than 3,000 km of Africa by force of changes of pressure in the atmosphere and the force
of the earth's rotation14. The rainfall on the highlands of Ethiopia and East Africa, and
the collection of streams in the Basin all run down to the Mediterranean sea and
contribute to the swell of the Nile waters. In addition, the Monsoon Winds, blowing
from the Indian Ocean, also account for relief rain over the East African plateau and this
contributes to the source of waters of the Nile. The total discharge of this great river is
less than the size of its basin would lead one to expect. This is so partly because,
although some 1,300 - 2,000 mm15 of rainfalls on the two main geographic source areas,
the lower half of the river crosses desert areas in Sudan and Egypt, leaving an annual
flow of no more than 6% of the total amount of rain falling in the basin. Hence, its
average annual flow 84 milliards of c.m , it is only a fraction of the flow of some other
rivers of comparable size16.
The swamps and lakes of the middle and upper reaches of the White Nile exercise a
considerable regulatory effect on the regime of the river. An important feature of the
whole Nile Basin is the prevalence of swampland. Poor drainage, coupled with the
climatic conditions in certain areas, have accounted for this state of affairs. Swamps are
found throughout a wide range of elevations, from the high altitude peat swamps at
Kigezi to the flings swamps along the edge of the lakes17. In particular, in the vast Sudd
region of the Sudan, the river loses a considerable amount of its discharge, though later
the amount of water estimated to be equal to that loss restored by the Sobat from
Ethiopia.
14 Garretson, A.H.: "The Nile Basin" Oceana, New York. 1967 p.256
15 Ibid
16 The Congo, for instance, has an annual flow of 1,250 milliards of cu.m while that of the Amazon is 2,500 milliards
cu.m. See ibid.
17 For example, along both the north and the south shares of Lake Victoria swamps occur at the head of almost every
in a much indented shoreline. The major rivers such as Kagera and the Mara, create large swampy areas in their
deltas. The Democratic Republic of the Sudan, Ministry of Irrigation and HEE, Control and use of the Nile Waters,
Khartoum, Khartoum University Press, 1975 p. 1-2.
16
The kind of wetlands which are concentrated in the southern Sudan are also found in
Uganda and elsewhere. These wetlands are important in the context of Nile hydrology
as areas of water evaporation. The Sudd in particular has been studied over many years
from hydrological viewpoint because of the proposals for reducing the losses by the
construction of the Janglei Canal. Less attention has been paid to the Bahr El Ghazal
tributaries and the mouhar marshes where significant amounts of water are also
evaporated. The White Nile sub-system has a much more regular flow throughout the
year than the Blue Nile - Atbara sub-system with its seasonal surges of flood waters
alternating with trickles or even total stoppages. This stability is due to the great deep
lakes of Victoria and Albert which dominate the headwaters of the White Nile providing
a relatively steady discharge little affected by seasonal variations. This turns these
source lakes into reliable natural storage basins for downstream countries, as long as the
upper-basin countries make no critical demands on the quantities of the waters stored.
This is not to deny the existence of some seasonal variation in the flow of the river
throughout the year. In fact, the White Nile discharge at Khartoum shows more
variation, which, however, is much less dramatic than that of the Blue Nile. The White
Nile at Khartoum provides only 40 % of the river discharge: but at the low flow it
accounts for four-fifths of the total delta discharge.
The entire drainage basin constitutes one of the largest fresh-water basins in the world.
After Lake Superior, Lake Victoria is the world's largest fresh-water lake and, as we
observed earlier, the Nile is the second longest river in the world after the Mississippi.
These facts show that the Nile Basin is a large-size freshwater system.
CHAPTER TWO
RIPARIAN COUNTRIES OF THE NILE AND FUTURE
CHALLENGES
The importance of the Nile Basin is highlighted with regard to: the various
subsystems; the economy of the Nile Basin; development of the Nile Basin; political
dynamics, policies and strategies; the economic importance for agriculture and hydro-
electrical power; rapid population growth and environmental degradation; deforestation
and soil erosion impact.
The Nile Basin includes one third of Ethiopia, a substantial portion of Sudan, almost
the entire cultivated and settled areas of Egypt, the whole of Uganda, parts of Kenya,
18
Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Eritrea. The Nile
Water system consists of numerous tributaries and a few head water lakes. The main
tributaries are clustered in four subsystems: the White Nile, the Abbay (Blue Nile),
Tekeze (Atbara) and Baro-Akobo (Sobat) Subsystems.
The furthest source of the White Nile is the Luvironza River which discharges into
Lake Victoria at the Uganda-Tanzania frontier. The Nzoria River drains Mount Elgon
and enters Lake Victoria. The Kagera River traverses the borders of Rwanda and
Uganda and then discharges itself into the White Nile. Lake Victoria, one of the largest
fresh water lakes in the world, forms the main source of the White Nile. Lake Albert,
which lies on the floor of the Rift Valley and the other two Rift Valley Lakes, i.e. the
George and the Edward, are additional sources of the White Nile in the Great Lakes
Region. Further north, the Bahr El Ghazal and its tributaries drain the northern part of
Congo-Nile divide and then joins the White Nile in the southern Sudanese plains.
The Blue Nile originates in the Ethiopian northwestern plateau. Its furthest source is
the River Gish Abbay in the Choqie Mountains some 60 km south of Bahir Dar City.
The Blue Nile has numerous tributaries include the following rivers: the Dabus,
Dedessa, Fincha, Guder, Muger, Jamma, Wolaka, Ashilo, Birr, Beles, Dinder and
Rahad. Its catchment area is smaller than that of the White Nile, whereas its water
contribution to the main Nile is four times than that of the White Nile. Due to seasonal
rainfall on the Ethiopian plateau, the flow of the Blue Nile varies considerably. The
rainy season on the Ethiopian plateau extends from June to September. The maximum
18 "Abbay" - The name of the river Nile in Ethiopia. Abbay means in geaz the 'big'. Geaz is one of the oldest Semitic
languages in Ethiopia.
19
flow of the Blue Nile in August, for instance is as high as 60 times of its low
discharge19, which usually occurs in February.
The physical nature of the basin and the seasonal concentration of the water runoff has
resulted in the high degree of soil erosion every year, further resulting in land
degradation in the upper basin. According to a recent report, Ethiopia's annual loss of
top soil is 405 million cubic meters from the Blue Nile basin alone20. The Abbay (Blue
Nile) traverses 1450 km from its source until it joins the White Nile.
The Tekeze (Atbara) Subsystem, whose upper streams rise in northern Ethiopia, and
southern Eritrea, perennially replenishes the main Nile in northern Sudan. The Rivers
Tekeze, Angareb and Guang are the main headwaters of Atbara. The Mereb and
Tekeze Rivers at different sections, mark the Ethiopia-Eritrea border. This subsystem
contributes 13 % of the total annual flow of the Nile Waters. The climatic pattern and
the physical environment of the Tekeze (Atbara) subsystem is similar to that of The
Abbay (Blue Nile). Hence, it is prone to a high degree of soil erosion and land
degradation. Ethiopia thus annually loses 120 mcm (million cubic metres) topsoil
through the water runoff.21
The Baro, Akobo, Alwiro, Gilo and Pivor Rivers drain the western plains of Ethiopia
and join the Sobat River in Sudan. The Baro, Pivor and Alwiro Rivers make up a 380
km frontier line between Ethiopia and Sudan. It is estimated that the amount of water
19 T.Tvedt.:"The management of water and irrigation: The Blue Nile." in Doornbos, M.(ed) Beyond conflict in the
Horn of Africa James Curry Ltd., London 1992 p.82
20 Ethiopian Valleys Development Studies Authority. "Ethio-Sudanese Relations with Respect to Water Resources".
Monograph in Amharic, Addis Ababa. 1991 p. 2. See also C.R. Joy.: Island in the desert: the challenge of The Nile
Coward McCann Inc, New York. 1967 p. 87
21 Ethiopian Valleys Development Authority.: Op cit p.
20
carried by this subsystem to the Nile, is 14 % of the river's total annual flow.22
Compared to other river systems that flow toward west, the Baro has wider banks and a
less irregular course. It is the only navigable river across the Sudanese-Ethiopian
border. Previously, there was a river transport using a steamboat between Gambella
and southern Sudan, but has now discontinued. It is in this basin that Ethiopia and
Sudan have numerous ethnic groups with a common language, culture and economic
activities.
The two lower riparians: Sudan and, especially Egypt, are totally dependent on the Nile
water for their irrigation and hydro-electric power generation. In the Nile Basin the
upper riparians are 'suppliers', while the lower riparians are 'the utilizers'. This state of
affairs has continued for a millennium, and was regulated solely by the dynamics of the
natural environment. All the countries of the Nile Basin share common problems, such
as population growth and limited resources. These problems have not been adequately
addressed and the countries rely upon Foreign Aid for development. The use and the
growing demand for water from the Nile system is a stark reality. (See Annexure A)
22 G. Tassew.: A Note: Development along the Sudan frontier, Natural Water Resources Development Commission.
Addis Ababa. 1965 p. 3
21
2. General descriptions of the Nile Riparian Countries
2.1 Upper Riparian Countries of the Nile Basin
(Upper Riparian Countries of the Horn)
A. Ethiopia
Brief Geographical Description
Ethiopia is Africa's tenth largest country and lies in the north-eastern Horn of Africa
and shares its borders with Somali and Djibouti in the east, Kenya in the south, Sudan
in the west and Eritrea in the north. Ethiopia lies between latitude 3' and 18'N and
longitudes 33' and 48'E with and area of 1.1 million km. Ethiopia occupies the most
extensive highland mass in Africa, rising from below sea level in the Danakil
depression to about 4,6000 m in the northern highlands. Ethiopia is the major
contributor and key headwater country from where 86 % of the waters rise, and start
their long journey to downstream countries as indicated earlier. The rivers that drain
the western highlands of Ethiopia contribute to the bulk flow of the Nile as measured in
the Aswan Dam. Out of the 84,00 billion cubic meters (billion cu.m) of water that is
carried by the Nile River, 72,00 billion cu.m of the total flow is contributed by the three
major rivers, the Atbara, the Blue Nile and the Sobat (Ako-Bo-Baro). The contribution
of the Blue Nile is immense, as Charles Joy commented 30 years ago:
"most important rushing down from the roof of the world in Ethiopia, come tumultuous
rivers, chief among them is the Blue Nile which keeps the great river from dying up
before it reaches the sea.23
Together with the huge volume of water, a very substantial amount of sediment is also
washed down from the highlands and carried towards the Mediterranean, annually
23 C.R. Joy.: Islands in the Desert: The challenge of The Nile. Coward McCann New York. 1967 p.87
22
replenishing the irrigable lands of Egypt and Sudan. This natural flow is hindered by
the huge Aswan high dam and the other lesser dams in the Sudan. It was estimated that
1.285 billion tons of topsoil was washed down from the Ethiopian Nile Basin every
year. Ethiopia however, is one of the lesser beneficiaries of the Nile water resources.
During the colonial era, Ethiopia was heavily engaged in the anti-colonial struggle to
preserve territorial integrity and national independence of the country. Hence, Ethiopia
resisted the colonial powers which entailed a lot of sacrifices. Thus Ethiopia preserved
her independence, but remained underdeveloped.
There were however, some attempts to develop the Abbay (Blue Nile) basin which is
about one-quarter of the country's territory. In 1927 King Tefare Mekonen sent a
special envoy of Ethiopia, Dr. Workneh Martin, to the United States Government. The
objective was to strengthen diplomatic relations and most importantly, to obtain
engineers for the Lake Tana Development project in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian
Government's offer to the American counterparts had to reasons: To entice the
Americans in business partnership in the coveted area of the Abby (Blue Nile) and
secondly, to use the American influence to ease the British pressure on Ethiopia not to
utilize the Nile River. As a result of this effort, the J.G White Engineering Corporation
was designated by the US Government to deal with the Lake Tana project and send
engineering personnel to Ethiopia in 1929. The physical survey for the project
commenced in 1930 and estimated the total cost as follows:24
Lake outlet works - $4,350,000;
A highway from Addis Ababa to Lake Tana - $3,370,000;
Engineering and construction fee of 15 % - $1,158,000 and
The total amounting to $8,878,000
24 White Engineering Corporation New York. Report on Lake Tana outlet control works and Ethiopian highway from
Addis Ababa to Lake Tana. New York. 1934 p.2
23
The project however failed to be materialized for two reasons: The Americans
withdrew because of British opposition to the project, and the impending Italian
invasion of Ethiopia was imminent.
On the other hand in 1935 the technical representatives of the British administration in
Sudan and the Egyptian Government agreed between them on a dam construction
project on Lake Tana to accumulate some 2.7 billion cu.m over a year. This project
failed, which naturally the Ethiopian Government would not accept, because it was
planned by her strategic adversaries and for the benefit of other countries.25
Climatic Factors
The highlands of Ethiopia have a generally temperate climate, occupying about 50% of
the total area; accommodating nearly 90 % of human population, 75 % of the national
livestock and 95 % of the cultivated land. The Inter-tropical Convergence Zone, the
north-east trade wind and the south-east monsoon are the main factors influencing the
climate in Ethiopia. Because of Ethiopia's proximity to the equator, seasonal
temperature variations are relatively small. The daily temperature during the dry season
in the highlands is about 21C, but frost may occur above 2,300 m in the lowlands. The
daily temperature may exceed 30C, depending on location.
When the revolution gained momentum in Egypt after 1952, and after the revolutionary
leader of that nation successfully re-incorporated the Suez Canal back to Egypt in
1956, the question of water security figured itself among the top priorities in Egyptian
development strategy. With some negotiated and limited agreement with the newly
independent Sudan, Egypt went ahead with the design and the actual construction of
the Aswan high dam with the obtained and promised assistance from the former USSR
during the late 1950's. Ethiopia, the closest neighbour, was not consulted. Ethiopia
In the 1959 Egypt and Sudan's continuous and exclusive negotiations deliberately
ignored Ethiopia as well as the interests of the other upstream riparians. Then the
Ethiopian Government declared that it would not sit idle and made it clear that it would
develop its own water resources within its territorial jurisdiction. In a statement by the
Emperor Haile Selasse on 2 November 1957 it was stated:
"We have already explained that plans are under construction to utilize our rivers as
an essential step in the development of agriculture and industry, it is of paramount
importance to Ethiopia, a problem of the first order that the waters of the Nile be made
to serve the life and needs of our (beloved) people now living and those who will follow
us in centuries to come. However, generally, Ethiopia may be prepared to share this
tremendous (God-given) wealth of hers with friendly nations neighbouring upon her,
for the life and welfare of their people, it is Ethiopian's sacred duty to develop the great
watershed which she possesses in the interests of her own rapidly expanding
population and economy. To fulfill this task, we have arranged for the problem to be
studied in all its aspects by experts in the field. Ethiopia has time and again set this
forth as her position regarding the utilization of the Nile Waters.27
26 W.A. Klerru.: The Nile Waters questions: Political aspect of utilization of the Nile Waters. Unpublished PH.D
dissertation. University of California. 1962 P. 6
27 Ethiopian Observer. Vol. II, Number 2, January 1958 P. 93
25
This statement implied that Ethiopia had already commissioned the United States
Engineering firm in the Abbay (Nile Basin). As already mentioned, the project was
completed in 1964 without tangible economic or political consequences for the more
powerful downstream riparians. The free flow of the Nile has always been a national
security issue for Egypt, Therefore, its leaders sometimes spoke openly to deter
upstream countries, particularly Ethiopia, not to unilaterally use the Nile. For example
the late President Sadat warns:
"any action that would endanger the waters of the Blue Nile will be forced with a firm
reaction on the part of Egypt, even if that action should lead to war."
Direct conflicts have not taken place between Ethiopia and Egypt since the early 19th
century, but psychological warfare and mutual suspicion have always shrouded
Ethiopian-Egyptian relations. In the history of the two countries, it has been observed
that the Egyptians aim to keep Ethiopia under constant pressure, so that the latter would
not threaten the continued discharge of the Nile waters. The hard environmental reality
is that nature has accorded Ethiopia the potential command of the most essential
headwaters of the Nile, while life in Egypt and lower Sudan can only sustain a portion
of these water resources. Under the current political conditions, since the eruption of
26
the Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict two years ago, the role of Egypt remains in the
background with the motivation of supporting and backing Eritrea in its conflict with
Ethiopia. In addition to this, despite the OAU intervention in particular, Ethiopia's role
to bring peace in Somalia has been challenged by Egypt, with the view to establish a
puppet state in order to match Ethiopia. These Egyptian policies reflect on Egypt's
permanent interest in the Nile and the Blue Nile in particular.
Regarding the irrigation of the Ethiopian Nile Basin 1,600,000 hectares of land
including 115,000 hectares around Tekeze (Atbara), Angerab and Guang Rivers,
1,000,000 hectares around Baro (Sobat) River and 400,000 hectares of land
around Abbay (Blue Nile) were planned for agriculture under irrigation. The total
irrigable land identified in the whole basin was 433,754 hectares, requiring 6.3
BCM of water for development. Of the sites that were identified for reservoirs,
20 dams would have a combined storage volume of over 100 billion cu.m. The
Valleys of Rivers Rahad, Dinder and Beles are suitable for irrigated agriculture.
The tributaries of the Abbay such as the Dedesa, Dabus, Gudar, Bashilo, Jama
and Muger have extensive valleys which can be harnessed for irrigated
agriculture famines and repeated droughts. Ethiopia should and must utilize her
water valleys, especially for food production.
Morever, most of the rivers in the Ethiopian Nile Basin are remarkably suitable
for hydro-electric power production. It is possible to say that the cheapest and
most abundant source of power for Ethiopia is hydro-electric power. The rivers
of Ethiopia have the potential of producing 56,000 million KWH of
hydro-electric power.28 For a poor country like Ethiopia, whose economy is
weak and its foreign exchange bogged down by ever mounting oil prices, it is
essential to develop hydro-power in order to satisfy the future need for energy. In
The four major dam sites on the Abbay River, downwards from Lake Tana, are
known as: Karadobi, Mabil, Mendaia and the 'border project'. The four dams
have the capacity to store over 51 BCM of water and generate over 25 billion
KWH, about three times the actual production of the Aswan high dam. Of the 33
identified projects; it was only after 33 years, that one small hydro-power dam at
Fincha, with a storage capacity of 0.6 billion cu.m of water and power generating
capacity of 110 MW has been constructed and put in operation. The water
resources that are available to the three valleys are estimated to be 57.8 BCM per
year. The demand for water to irrigate arable land of 1.2 million hectare in the
basins, is estimated at 19.0 billion cu.m. This is almost half of the total water
earmarked for the Baro-Akobo basin mainly because of big losses by evaporation
in the Abbay (Blue Nile). The estimated available water is 53.3 billion cu.m and
the total requirement to irrigate, 0.84 million hectares. However only 8.4 billion
cu.m or 15 % of the total volume is available in the basin.
31 CSA (1995) The 1994 Population and Housing Census of Ethiopia, Office of Population and Housing
Census Commission, Addis Ababa.
30
Environmental Challenges
"The agriculture of Ethiopia has been at the mercy of rainfall despite the
commonly- held belief that 'Ethiopia is the water tower of Africa'. Testimony to
these are the series of recurrent droughts, famine and massive deaths. Equally
present realities have brought home the unavoidable hard fact that Ethiopia
cannot afford to remain a chronically drought-stricken country with an agrarian
system of a traditional type fettered in a paradox of population growth and rising
expectation and demands of its peoples. It then follows that whatever expansion
and intensification is carried out under rain-fed agriculture, food self-sufficiency
cannot be achieved unless augmented by irrigation. Hence, there is the felt need
to develop its irrigated agricultural potentials.32
It was stated in 1996 that food sufficiency in Ethiopia will be the main goal, and
that Ethiopia had no other choice but to increase its agricultural production by
seeking and obtaining a fair share of the waters of the Nile. Ethiopia is projected
32 Ethiopian technical experts paper presented to the first Nile 2002 Conference held in Aswan, 1993 pp. 69-70
31
to have more people to feed by 2025 than Egypt.33 The current government in
Ethiopia seems to be committed to develop all resources within its borders.
Although financial constraints and technological difficulties have stalled the
implementation of major projects for a long time, the government is expected to
expand its agricultural and irrigation capacities, as there is relative political and
economic stability.34 Ethiopia's new image has increased the confidence of policy
makers that fair distribution Nile waters can be agreed up on through peaceful
negotiations. There are no legal or institutional obligations, which detract
Ethiopian policy makers (as well as planners and engineers) from fulfilling this
duty in the best interest of their people. The once rich and diverse ecosystem of
the Blue Nile source has been severely affected as a result of both natural
phenomenon and human activities. The clearing of papyrus35 from the Lake Tana
shore area while in search of firewood and housing construction material, the
water level has significantly declined and caused environmental degradation and
also affecting the aquatic system of Lake Tana.
B. Eritrea
Brief Geographical Description
Eritrea is a relatively small Red Sea state, situated in north-eastern Africa along
the Red Sea coast and has a total area of about 121,144 km. The country shares
its borders with the Red Sea on the North and East, Ethiopia on the South-East,
Djibouti on the south and Sudan in the north and north-west. The cultivatable
land is about 1.6 million hectares which is 13 % of the total area. The Cultivated
and is 439,000 hectares, i.e. 26 % of the cultivatable area and 4 % of the total
area.36
35 Papyrus: paper made in ancient Egypt from a plant that is similar to grass, or the plant itself.
36 R.M. Maxon.: East Africa, Washington. 1993 p. 8
32
Climatic Factor
The climate ranges from hot arid, adjacent to the Red Sea, to temperate sub-
humid in isolated micro-catchments within the eastern escarpment of the
highlands. Some areas of the country are more than 3,000 m in elevation, and the
average annual temperature ranges from 21C in the highlands to 25C in the
lowlands. The total annual rainfall ranges from less than 200 mm at the northern
border with Sudan, to more than 700 mm in a restricted area on the southern
border with Ethiopia.
33
In 1993, 109 small dams were built mainly for irrigation with a total storage capacity
of 24 million m. A storage reservoir of 8 million m was built in the 1960's on the
Gash River to irrigate the Alighider Estate, but needs regular de-silting. Several
major dams that were built long ago are now completely silted up, eg. the Foro Dam,
which had a storage capacity of 4 million m just after its construction in the 1920's.
In the 1960's a new dam was built at Foro on the River Haddas, with a capacity of 23
million m, but by 1988 this reservoir was also completely silted up. The main
sources of domestic water in rural areas are tub wells and shallow wells. The present
status of the rural water supply is unknown. The population in rural areas, subsist
mainly on agriculture and livestock raising.
The plateau region and in the north and west where rainfall is sufficient, agriculture
is the primary means of livelihood. In the drier coastal plain and the arid regions of
the north and west, livestock raising predominates. Eritrea's agriculture and economy
suffered a massive damage as a result of the following key factors:
Lack of rains, to grow crops.
Scarce alternative resources.
The Eritrean leadership declaring war which has forced productive
peasants to abandon there land and join the military.
Since independence the country has been in a state of war with all its neighbors. This
aggressive behavior has generally affected the country's economy. The cost of this
conflict has been high.
Population Growth
The total population was estimated to be 3.4 million in 1994, with an annual growth
rate higher than 3%. The density is 28 persons per km but 65 %37 of the population
lives in the four highland provinces, although they account only for 16 % of the total
land area.
37 Eritrea was previously a northern province of Ethiopia, Ethiopian rule was terminated in May 1991. In
Eritrea formal independence was declared as a result of an Eritrean Referendum held in April 1993
34
C. Kenya
Brief Geographical Description
Kenya covers an area of 592,000 square kilometers and bordered with Ethiopia in the
North. It has a water surface area of 11,230 square kilometres and is divided into five
drainage basins, including the Lake Victoria Basin Kenya has diverse morphology
which comprises of the highlands rising to Mount Kenya at a height of 5200 m,
dissected by the Rift Valley with lowlands around the Lake Victoria Basin. In the
north the residue of the highlands join the Indian Ocean coastline. The highland
areas comprise of volcanic rock with fertile soil and a temperate climate with good
reliable rainfall. The lowland areas (with the exception of the Lake Victoria Basin
and the coastal belt) cover large sparsely populated areas with low rainfall, poor soil
and a fragile ecosystem. Over 80 % of the country is arid and semi-arid.
Climatic Factors
Kenya has an annual rainfall of 621 mm, which varies from below 250 mm in arid
areas in the north and east to over 2,000 mm in the highlands and mountain ranges.
The annual rainfall generally follows the seasonal pattern. The seasonal variations
are considerable to the east of the Rift Valley. In the Northern and Eastern parts of
the dry lowlands area, there are two distinct rainy seasons which run from March to
May and October to December.
Hydrologically, Kenya is divided into five drainage systems, determined by the great
Rift Valley which runs north-south. The rivers drain the eastern flanks of the
highlands and flow into the Indian Ocean. Those drain the western flanks flow into
Lake Victoria. The five drainage Basins are the following:
35
Catchment
No.
Drainage Area Area (km_) % of total
1 Lake Victoria 49000 8
2 Rift Valley 130000 23
3 River and Coast 70000 12
4 Tana River 132000 22
5 Emaso Nyro North 205000 35
Total 592000 100
Relative to its land mass and population, Kenya has limited water resources, i.e. the
perennial rivers concentrated in the western central and coastal areas. Lake Victoria
is situated on the eastern African plateau at an elevation of 900 meters, surrounded
by relatively low-lying land 1,100 meters above sea-level (adjacent shores). The total
area of the lake is approximately 68,800 km, of which the Kenyan shore is
accounted ten percent. Lake Victoria's38 drainage basin in Kenya covers the whole
area of west of the Rift Valley. The basin receives a good amount of rainfall which is
well distributed over the area. In this area the rainfall is consistent from the
watershed of the catchment to the outflow of the river system. Lake Victoria is the
second largest lake in the world with a surface area of 69,500 km. Only 6 % of the
lake lies in Kenya. The lake is a sanctuary to hundreds of bird species, a source of
water for human consumption and used for agriculture and industry.
In Kenya, as early as the 1950's, a small area of the Kano plain was developed for
rice production. By 1957, some 4000 acres were cultivated by irrigation. In 1959, the
colonial government of Kenya appointed Sir Alexander Gibb to study the feasibility
of the Kenyan plain for development. According to the reports of the Gibb
38 Country paper of the Republic of Kenya presented at the 5th Nile Conference in Addis Ababa, 1997
36
Commission, irrigable land in the Kano plains was estimated at 29,892 acres, of
which 15,060 acres were suitable for growing sugarcane, 14,832 acres for rice
production.39 Due to the historical circumstances, though the project was important
for the Kenyan economy, the materialization of the project was postponed. Out of
Kenya's total irrigation potential of estimated 160,000 hectares of high potential land
(approximately 10 % is situated around Lake Victoria).40 See table 4.
Kenya's rivers Total area Irrigable Area (km_) Potential Water Requirement
and lakes basin (km_) UB US LB LS UB US LB LS
Lake Victoria 48542 1188 9272 2357 10176 1222 8906 2306 9795
Lake Ambaseli 3947 97 936 163 1088 126 1220 214 1420
Lake Marghrita 4133 214 1007 428 1146 331 1554 661 1767
Lake Natron 16912 1288 3154 1441 3369 1574 3839 1728 4098
Lotagipi Swamp 18994 74 2330 1098 2746 103 3247 1530 3828
Omo River 83627 4059 12569 5868 14470 5761 17378 8200 19991
Lake Bor 183245 7091 26076 9572 40907 9799 36343 13217 57868
U. Juba 28664 578 3716 2132 4225 821 5402 3109 6152
Galana 38907 150 8046 249 9632 178 10122 282 12152
Pangani 1463 30 262 41 377 36 317 49 383
Ras Chixmbone 35213 29 5054 43 7481 41 6722 59 10089
Lake Tana 96345 1267 19974 2713 24063 1649 26098 3413 31556
Umba 286 2 39 6 41 2 36 5 38
39 W.A. Klerru.: The Nile Waters questions: Political aspects of utilization of the Nile Waters. Unpublished
PH.D dissertation. UCLA. 1962 p. 6
40 The Republic of Kenya: Development Plan. 1970 - 1974 pp. 228 - 229
37
Note:
UB - Best soil for upland crops
US - Best and suitable soil for upland crops
LB - Best soil for lowland crops
LS - Best and suitable soils for lowland crops
Population Growth
38
Environmental Challenges
Generally speaking, Kenya has adequate water resources to meet its current
demands. Though, it faces a number of challenges in rationalizing consumption.
Temporal and spatial distribution of water sometimes causes acute shortages in
major urban areas, e.g. in Nairobi and Mombassa, as well as in rural communities.
This happens due to a variety of factors: variations in climatic conditions, droughts,
increasing demand, distribution system breakdown and mismanagement are the
major ones. Future demands of the rapidly increasing population (at present 26
million) which is accompanied by agricultural and industrial developments are also
likely to cause scarcity on the available supply. For example, at present, the water
supply deficiency in some towns like Mombassa is about 60 %, while the demand is
growing at a rate of about 5 % per annum.41 The increase in population together with
the growing demand for water could have impact on the eco-system. So, this
unbalance necessitates better planning and sound management of all the water
resources in Kenya.
The Omo-Turkana Basin, whose upper stream river is known as "Omo", rises from
the southern and south-western highlands of Ethiopia, and finally flows into Lake
Turkana. The biggest portion of Lake Turkana lies in Kenyan territory. This Basin is
potentially rich, but it is the least developed of all water basins in the sub-region. The
Ethiopian portion of Lake Turkana is continuously diminishing and retreating
southwards from the Ethiopian frontier into Kenyan territory. It is further anticipated
that Lake Turkana will eventually retreat entirely from Ethiopia, and be contained
within Kenya. The lower Omo-Turkana Basin is sparsely populated and
characterised by pastoralism and a nomadic lifestyle in both countries between the
two Ethiopia and Kenya. The water issue has not yet figured in their neighbourly
relations. Should either one, or both of the countries turn their attention to the
effective exploitation of the basin, an interstate basin issue will be on the political
agenda.
41 Country report prepared by the Ministry of Land Reclamation, Regional and Water Development, Nairobi,
Kenya. 1997.
39
If Kenya and Ethiopia explore their respective development potential, it is possible
for them as to harness their resource for the benefit of their peoples. Thus, it is now
time for the two countries to work on an institutional framework that serves their
mutual interest. This would prevent future conflict and lead to cooperation and joint
endeavours for development.
The upper Equatorial Nile Basin covers Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda, Democratic
Republic of Congo, Kenya and substantial parts of Uganda. The countries in this
sub-region are characterized by civil wars and instability, eg. the so-called 'Congo
Crisis' which currently affects those countries. The equatorial upper riparian
countries contribute 14 % to the total annual volume of the Nile.
D. Tanzania
Brief Geographical Description
Tanzania is an east African country lying on the South Eastern great African plateau.
It covers an area of 945,000 km and has a common border with six countries. It is
bordered with the Indian Ocean in the east, Lake Victoria in the north, Lake
Tanganyika in the west and Lake Nyasa in the south. Its altitude ranges between
1,000 meters and 2,000 meters. Although the country is close to the equator, It is not
very hot country.
Climatic Factors
More than half of the country receives an average of 800 mm rain annually. The
rainy seasons extended from December to April. The rainfall varies from 500 to
1000 mm and the highest rainfall receivers are the north west and north east of Lake
Victoria Basin and the southern highlands.42
About 50 % of the freshwater runoff in Tanzania from the major river systems (the
Rufisi, Pangani, Mami, Ruvu, Mburemkuru, Matandu and Ruvuma) and flow to the
Indian Ocean. The Rufisi River contributes 50% of the total surface water. The
remaining 50 % is divided into surface water draining northwards into Lake Victoria,
westwards into Lake Tanganyika, southwards into Lake Myasa and then into the
Zambezi River, and finally into a number of internal drainage basins which have no
outlet to the sea. The main internal drainage basins are the Lake Rukuma and Bubu
Complex, Lake Eyasi and Lake Manyara. The Lake Nyasa, Lake Victoria and the
Lake Tanganyika basins drain into the international water bodies. (See the table as
indicated)
Table 5 - Main annual runoff in million cubic meters at gauging sites.
Source: Country paper of the Republic of Tanzania presented at the Nile 2002
Conference in Addis Ababa, 1997.
41
The Tanzanian portion of Lake Victoria and its associated basin has a significant
importance to the social and economic life of the population living within and
around the basin. It provides fresh water for domestic consumption, agricultural,
industrial use. It also serves for transportation, recreation. The major socio-economic
activities on the lake and its catchments area include: agriculture, fishing, marine
transportation, recreation as well as supplying water supplies for domestic and
industrial use in the urban areas situated on the shoreline. Agriculture and fishing
remain the dominant socio-economic activities of most of the population. Mining is
also an important economic activity in some pockets around the lake in Tanzania.
Germany was defeated in the First World War and Tanzania became a British
Colony under the rubric of the League of Nations mandate and UN trusteeship. The
Sukumaland project plan indefinitely suspended as Britain was more committed to
her downstream colonies: Sudan and Egypt. Britain was in favour of Egypt, so that
the latter received undiminished flow of the Nile waters. When the Suez Canal crisis
was in its peak (1956), some of the British Colonial officials intended developing the
In order to achieve accelerated social and economic development around the Lake
Victoria and in the Nile Basin countries, large multi-objective water projects are
needed. The Lakes Victoria, Edward, George, Albert and Kryogo are all fishing
waters. In 1955 the Economic Intelligence Unit estimated the fish production in that
year 23,350 tons. In terms of value, it was estimated that this would be equal to US
$25,000.47 In 1972 Tanzania, Burundi and Rwanda entered in to an agreement to
cooperate in the development of the Kagera River. The steps taken by these three
countries would be instrumental in encouraging the riparian states to develop a basin
cooperative regime supported by legal and institutional mechanisms.
Tanzania, and other countries sharing Lake Victoria, do not have adequate electric
power to run economic and social activities. There are ample opportunities to
construct large power stations to meet the existing demand. It is with an adequate
45 His Majesty's Government in the UK of Great Britain and Northern Ireland to the Trusteeship Council of the
United Nations on the administration of Tanganyika for the year 1960, Colonial No. 394, Her Majesty's
Stationary Office. London. 1961. p. 71
46 Ibid p. 72
47 Ibid p. 71
43
supply of electricity that the country will be able to improve the living standard of
the people.
In recent years, the population around the lake and within the basin has grown
rapidly at an average rate of 3 %. Currently the population of Tanzania is 27.2
million.48 The increasing population pressure and socio-economic activities in the
basin have resulted in changes in the land use, water quality, bio-diversity, wetlands
and fisheries. The fish stocks are decreasing and bio-diversity has declined. The lake
is seriously affected by agriculture, industrial and urbanization activities. It seems
though a prospect for rational and sustained utilization of the lake is underway. In
this respect, the Lake Victoria Environmental Management Project is the showcase
and expected to contribute in alleviating poverty and protecting the environment.
Environmental Challenges
The lake deterioration has been primarily due to discharges of municipal sewerage,
industrial effluent, agricultural fertilizers, and other agro-chemicals and pollutants
from the urban areas. The lake basin problems are further accelerated by land use
48 Human Development Report. Published for the United Nations Development Programme. Oxford University
Press. 1995
44
practices, which have a negative impact on the water quality and wetlands. In
Tanzania the main problem is the discharge of municipal and industrial waste, eg.
from mining activities. With regard to mining activities, the issue of opening the
Geta Gold Project (which is jointly owned by Ashanti Goldfields Limited of Ghana
and AngloGold Limited of South Africa) has raised a disputable concern.49 The
mining projects, which are found 20km away from Lake Victoria spoil the fresh
water surfaces' bio-diversity.
E. Uganda
Brief Geographical Description
Uganda lies in the heart of Africa along the equator and shares borders with Sudan in
the north, Kenya in the east, Tanzania and Rwanda in the south and the Democratic
Republic of Congo in the west. Uganda covers an area of 241,038 km_ and has an
average altitude of 1,200 meters above sea level. The highest point on Mount
Riwenzari peaks at 5,590 meters, while the lowest is 620 meters at the Albert Nile.
Uganda is geographically better placed in the Nile Basin, because Uganda is known
as a source of the White Nile and is the only country lying almost entirely within the
Nile Basin. Uganda is in special situation because it controls the outlet of Lake
Victoria at the Owen Falls hydro-power and therefore has a key position in the
utilization and regulation of the Lakes water.
Climatic Factors
49 Africa News Online - Tanzania ascertains environmental safety in Lake Victoria. p. 1-2.
45
recently changed. As mentioned at the beginning of this chapter, the White Nile
flows from Uganda into Sudan, and it is joined with the Blue Nile at the town of
Malakal. The largest proportion of the White Nile basin lies in the Sudan, which
covers 63 % of the area, whereas only 6 % lies within Uganda.
1
Facts about Uganda, 1991.
46
Water Resource Potential
Table 6 - Irrigable areas and potential water requirements in Uganda
Potential water requirement
Lakes and Total area Irrigable area (km_)
(mm_)
Rivers (km_) UB US LB LS UB US LB LS
Lake Albert 45522 593 40801 2118 5138 543 4404 1958 4716
Lake Victoria 154199 1645 31175 8527 33222 1588 30684 8154 32639
Sobat 3881 15 1212 121 1259 16 1295 131 1345
White Nile 27956 289 6991 2498 7203 268 691 2316 6898
Lotagipi Swamp 2074 0 61 0 63 0 78 0 80
Mugasera 26 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 3
Arumin 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Omo 2365 26 567 62 607 30 651 71 698
Oubangui 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
TOTAL 236031 2568 44809 13327 47495 2446 43806 12630 46379
As seen, the potential irrigation water demand of Uganda appears to be limited. The
lack of food security is caused by the absence of large scale irrigation in Uganda.
Although there are many opportunities for irrigation, very few have been developed
in the country. The farmers in Uganda need much less water than their counterparts
in Egypt to produce food crops.
47
Table 7 - Hydro-electric Projects in Uganda
River or
Project Head (m) Installed Capacity Remarks
Lakes
Owen Falls Lake Victoria 17.8 - 21.0 60.0 MW Extension
Bojagali Victoria Nile 18.5 180.0 MW
Ayago South Kyoga Nile 73.5 240.0 MW
Ayago North Kyoga Nile 43.5 300.0 MW
Murchison Kyoga Nile 88.0 480.0 MW
Kamdini Kyoga Nile NA NA North Karuma
Kagera (Kigagati) Kagera NA 700.0 KW
Ruizi and Niazikumba NA 500 - 1000 KW
Muzizi, Mapanga -
Ruimi Rivers NA 10.000 KW
1.271.7 MW = 1.27
TOTALS NA
GW
Source: Sub Saharan Africa hydrological assessment: Final Report, Uganda World
Bank (UNDP, 1989, 2-3).
Having all these hydro-electric projects, Uganda is currently facing power shortages.
The power shortage is one of the obstacles to the country's economic growth.
Demand is growing so fast that electricity is rationed almost daily, retarding industry
and sometimes even crippling it. The international power giant AES, recently won a
contract to dam the Ugandan portion of the White Nile, but the construction plan has
raised a number of concerns and differences between the government of Uganda and
the tourist industry. The real concern regarding the construction of this proposed
dam has to do with the Bujagali Falls, the natural spot that has been drawing tourists
to view the world's largest breathtaking rapids. Once the dam is built, the run will
become a little more than a placid lake. The tourist industry fears that the proposed
construction of such a dam will destroy the spectacular set of rapids which is one of
the country's top tourist attractions. This controversy over the planned dam remains
unresolved.
48
Population Growth and Water Demand
Presently the Ugandan population is 18.4 million.2 In the near future it is expected
that the number will have tripled, and by the year 2025 it reaches 55.2 million. As
the population grows, the demand for fresh water will also increase. The global
climate changes also affect the country's water supply and the demands will be more
pressing and huge..
Environmental Challenges
2
Ibid p. 2134
49
F. Democratic Republic of Congo
Brief Geographical Description
The highest peak in this area is the Mitumba Range, on the DRC's eastern border.
The Ubangi River, the main northern tributary of the Congo River, rises from the
northwestern slopes of this range. In the southwest of the Democratic Congo the
mountain chains are collectively designated on the Angola plateau. Here we locate
the source of the Kasai, the main southern affluent of the Congo River. Both the
Congo River Basin and the mountain regions are traversed by numerous rivers, and
the valleys are covered with dense vegetation. Virtually impenetrable equatorial
forests cover the eastern and north-eastern portions of the country. 3
50
Climatic Factors
The DRC's climate ranges from tropical rainforest in the Congo River Basin, to
tropical wet and dry areas in the southern uplands and to tropical highlands in the
eastern areas above 2,000 meters. In general, the temperatures and humidity are quite
high, but with much variation - many places on both sides of the equator have two
wet and two dry seasons. The average annual temperature is 250C and the average
annual rainfall is between 1,000 mm and 2,2000 mm, with the highest rainfall
measured in the heart of the Congo River Basin and the highlands of west Bukuru.
The average annual rainfall is about 1520 mm (about 60 inches) in the north and
1270 mm (about 50 inches) in the south. Frequent and heavy rainfall occurs from
April to November north of the equator and from October to May, south of the
equator. In the central part of the country, rainfall is relatively evenly distributed
throughout the year.
The DRC is endowed with several rivers and lakes. Among them the River Congo is
the largest, and most of the country lies within the vast hollow of this river basin.
The largest rivers known as the Ituri, Great Congo, Pygmy and Stanley Forest,
extend east from the confluence of the Arumumi and Congo Rivers close to Lake
Albert, covering some 65,000 km2. In this area of the Ugandan border, is Ruwenzori
Range, containing the Democratic Congo's highest point, Mougherita Peak
(5109m/16,762 feet).4 Most of the Congo is served by the Congo River system, It
has facilitated both trade and outlet. Its network of waterways is dense and evenly
distributed throughout the country, with three exceptions:
51
North-eastern Mayobe in the Bas-Zaire Region in the west, which is
drained by a small coastal river called the Shilongo;
A strip of land on the eastern border adjoining Lakes Albert and
Edward, which is part of the Nile River Basin, and
A small part of the extreme south-eastern Democratic Congo, which lies
in the Zambezi River Basin and drains into the Indian Ocean.
Most of Congo's lakes are also part of the Congo River Basin. In the west are Lac
Mai-Naombe and Lac Tumba, both being remnants of a huge internal lake that once
occupied the entire basin prior to the breach of the basin's edge by the Congo River,
and the subsequent drainage of the interior. In the south-east, Lake Mweru straddles
the border with Zambia on the eastern frontier. Lac Kiru, Central Africa's highest
lake and key tourist attraction, and Lake Tanganyika, just south of Lac Kiru, both
feed into the Lualaba River. The latter name is often given to the upper extension of
the Congo River. The waters of the eastern frontiers' northern largest lakes, the
Edward and Albert lakes, drain north into the Nile Basin.
The Congo River provides the country with an extensive network of navigable
waterways on the continent. Ten kilometers wide at mid-point of its length, its flow
is usually regular, because it is fed by rivers and streams from both sides of the
equator. The alternating rainy and dry seasons on each side of the equator guarantees
a regular supply of water for the main channel. At the point where navigation is
blocked by rapids and waterfalls, the sudden descent of the river creates a hydro-
electric potential.
Although the DRC is endowed with huge natural resources such as extensive land
for agriculture, mineral and untapped energy potential, It remains on of the worlds'
poorest nations. With GDP decline by about 6 % yearly in the early 1990's, the
52
DRC's economy has shown considerable deterioration. With hyperinflation nearly 40
% a month, the government deficit has risen by more than four times.5 The internal
conflict, and political unrest in the country are the main contributors for the
weakened economy.
Approximately 75 % of the working population is engaged in agriculture, which
accounts for nearly one-third of the GDP. Large areas of the Congo River Basin are
fertile and well suited for crops, but only about 3 % of the total land area is under
cultivation. The wide range of climatic areas permits diversified agricultural
production, and timber resources are extensive.
The DRC has massive hydro-electric potential because of its large rivers. A major
hydro-electric project at Inga, on the lower Congo River started operating in 1972
and has an annual capacity of nearly 40 million kilowatts. Most of the generating
plants have been built close to the mines to run mining operations. In the early
1990's the DRC had an electricity-generating capacity of 2.6 million kilowatts. The
current annual power output is 6 billion kilowat-hours, which is produced from
hydro-electric.
The DRC's population was estimated at 39.1 million in 1992, making the country
the most popular among sub-sahara Africa. The projection for 1995 was 43, 814,
000, yielding an overall population density of about 19 persons per square kilometer
(about 48 per square mile). The population is mainly concentrated in the eastern
highlands and along the lower Congo River. About 29 % of the population live in the
urban areas. With an annual population growth rate of 3.2% among the highest in
54 Ibid p. 957
53
Africa, the Democratic Congo is estimated to double its population in 22 years. 6 In
the Democratic Congo Nile sub-basin, the ever increasing population was estimated
at 5 million in 1995.
Environmental Challenges
The Democratic Congo portion of the sub-Nile Basin is also facing a variety of
environmental problems which are threatening the natural diversities of the country.
The country is currently experiencing water quality deterioration, deforestation and
soil degradation, mainly because of human activities. Due to these problems, the
country's agriculture 90 % of the population depends on it for their livelihood has
been deteriorating. The country's vast forests are also increasingly at risk. The major
threat is the multi-national companies 37 % of the total exploitable area of the
country's rainforest has already been designated as timber concessions. The most
intense logging to date has been in the Bas-Congo Region in the hinterlands of the
capital Kinshasha.
Logging itself disrupts the forest ecology, and worse, logging roads are carved out in
the forest. The forests have become means of survival for poor farmers who clear
and burn more forest fields.7 In 1993 one analyst reported that there was virtually no
rainforest left in the region of the Democratic Congo Nile catchment. The concern is
for the environment, soil conservation and the population growth. These major issues
need to be addressed in the country through cooperation in the basin.
55 Encyclopaedia of the Third World (4th ed), (ed. George Thomas Kurian). New York. 1992 p. 2134
56 Country paper of the DRC presented at the Nile 2002 Conference, Addis Ababa, 1997
54
G. Rwanda
Brief Geographical Description
55
Nyabarongo River and its main tributaries, the Lukarara, Mwogo, Biruruma,
Mukungwa, Base, Nyabugogo and Akanyaru Rivers. Rwanda's eastern border is
formed by the Akagera River on its way to Lake Victoria.
Climatic Factors
Rwanda has three main seasons: a short dry season in January, the major rain season
from February to May, and another dry season from May to late September. The
average yearly rainfall is 790 mm (31 inches)9 and is the heaviest in the western and
north-western mountain regions. Wide temperature variations occur because of the
difference in elevation.
Water resources were further depleted as watersheds and wetland areas were lost.
These problems were compounded, especially in the southern regions of the country
by severe droughts in the 1980's and early 1990's. The impact of water scarcity on
agriculture was harshest in all regions, in other areas too water shortages became
critical for personal, domestic and industrial needs.
59 Ibid p. 570
56
seasonal crops was good despite severe crop losses due to the dry weather in the
eastern and southern parts of the country. The average food production is estimated
at 2.8 million tones, an increase of 20 % the previous year.
Rwanda and Uganda concluded a power export deal in 1999, in which Uganda
export five megawatts of power to Rwanda at 30/33 KV and bought two megawatts
from Rwanda at 30 KV.
From 1985 to 1990 the population growth rate was estimated at 3.3 %.11 Of the
Rwandese population, 94 % live in the rural areas. In 1998 the population of Rwanda
was estimated at 7,956,172. The population density is 302 persons per square
kilometer (782 per square mile), making Rwanda one of the most densely populated
countries in Africa.12 The per hectare density was 3.2 people in 1993. If the lakes,
natural parks and forest resources are excluded from the equation the figure increases
to 422 people per square kilometer.
60Environmental Scarcity and Violent Conflict: The case of Rwanda. Occasional Paper.
1995.
61 Burundi and Rwanda, which sit on the water divide of the African continent drain partly
into Lake Victoria through the Kagera River, but does not own any shore on Lake Victoria.
57
Environmental Challenges
The country faces deforestation as a result of uncontrolled cutting of trees for fuel.
The overgrazing, soil exhaustion, soil erosion and widespread poaching are all major
environmental problems, which need to be addressed urgently. Rwanda attaches
great importance to the Nile for its equitable, rational use and its protection for the
benefit of all riparian countries on an equal basis.
H. Burundi
Brief Geographical Description
Burundi is an east African country lying in the middle of the African continent and
has a surface of 27,834 km2. It has a common border with Tanzania in the south and
east; in the north with Rwanda; and on the west with the Democratic Republic of
Congo. Burundi is exactly situated in the great African Plateau formed by the Nile
and Congo River Basins. The western slopes descend abruptly into the Great East
African Rift Valley toward the Ruzizi plain and Lake Tanganyika. The eastern
slopes rise toward the central uplands. Three natural regions are thus formed:13
The Rift Valley called the Imbo, along the western border. The Rift Valley
is a narrow plain that runs along the Rusizi River and the shores of Lake
Tanganyika, ending in the foothills of the western Congo-Nile divide. The
entire Rift Valley lies below 3,500 feet in elevation.
The eastern zone known as The Kamaso. The Kamaso is formed by the
central and eastern plateaus, with an average elevation of 6,000 feet, and
by savannas along the eastern border, where the average elevation is 3,400
feet.
58
The central mountain region. The central mountain region is formed by a
series of ridges running north to south that is generally less than 16
kilometers wide and 8,000 feet high. The eastern slope of this range in
south central Burundi gives rise to the headwater of the Rwanda River, one
of the sources of the Nile.
Climatic Factors
Burundi has a moderate tropical climate with average temperatures between 230 and
240C. The country has two seasons: the dry season from June to September and the
rainy season from February to May. The rainfall is irregular, with the heaviest
concentration of rain in the northwest. Rainfall on the plateaus averages 119.4 cm,
declining in the lower regions to 76.2 cm per year. Violent rainstorms are frequent at
the higher elevations. The lack of rain periodically causes drought.
Burundi's rivers flow into the basins of two major rivers, the Congo and the Nile.
The most important river flowing into the Congo Basin is the Rusizi, which has its
source in Lake Kiru and forms the border between the Democratic Congo and
Burundi. Among its many tributaries are the Lua, which forms part of the border
with Rwanda, the Nyamagana, the Kaburantwa, and the Mpanda. Other rivers
flowing into Lake Tanganyika include the Ndahanwa, the Dima, the Mulembwe and
the Neyngwe. The Ruvubu and Kagera Rivers are the south-eastern sources of the
Nile. The Kagera forms the border between Burundi and Rwanda and is part of the
Kanyaru. The Ruvubu separates Burundi from Tanzania.
59
Agricultural Development (Irrigation)
Population Growth
15
The country's total population is 5,943,057 as estimated in 1996. There is an
average growth rate of 3.1 % per year. This figure, when considering the country's
size, Burundi is overpopulated. With the fast population increase, the country faces
energy and water scarcity as well as other environmental problems. The country has
two small coal-fired generating plants and two small hydro-electric dams, which in
1998 produced 127 million kilowatt-hours of electricity. A portion of the country's
electricity is now supplied by hydro-electric facilities in Bakau, the Democratic
Republic of Congo. For most Burundians however, wood and other traditional fuels
remain the primary source of energy, which is the main factor for deforestation and
environmental degredation.
Environmental Challenges
60
pressure and recurrent political instability. The ethnic tension in the country has to
some degree contributed to food scarcity, poverty, and limited access to resources
and land pressures.
It was mentioned earlier in the previous topic that the upper riparian countries such
as Ethiopia, contributes 86 % to the total volume of the Nile waters, while the
remaining 14 % comes, through the White Nile subsystem from other equatorial
upper riparian countries: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Cogo,
Rwanda and Burundi. However, the two downstream riparians, namely Egypt and
Sudan, are the recipients of the water resources.
The two lower riparians are almost entirely dependent on the water that comes down
from outside their borders. The paradox is that the upper riparians contribute all the
water utilized by the two lower riparians, with no reciprocity in terms of money or
otherwise the shortage of water and environmental degradation caused by the years
of severe drought created great suffering for the people of the upper riparian states.
This section focuses on the two favoured downstream countries.
I. Egypt
Brief Geographical Description
Egypt lies in the north-eastern corner of the African continent with a total area of
about 1 million km2. It is bordered in the north by the Mediterranean Sea, in the east
by Israel and the Red Sea, on the south by Sudan and in the west by Libya.
61
Climatic Factors
The main annual rainfall is estimated at 18 mm. It ranges from 0 mm in the desert to
200 mm in the northern coastal region. In many districts heavy rainfall may occur,
only once in a two or three year period. During the summer, temperatures are
extremely high, reaching 380C to 430C with extremes of 490C in the southern and
western deserts. The Mediterranean coast has cooler conditions with 320C as a
maximum.
The Nile water is the main source of water for Egypt. Egypt alone has been using the
Nile waters many times more than all the riparians in the basin combined.
Geographically, the entire Egypt is arid and the country is totally dependent on the
Nile waters.16 The situation in Egypt is 'Aut Nilus aut Nihil ' ('No Nile, no life in
Egypt). This description was attributed to Heredotus (a Greek Philosopher) that
'Egypt is the Gift of the Nile'.17 The country's geographical link with and dependence
on the upstream riparians from where the life-giving water descends is so great and
important as the Nile is the sole source of life in Egypt. The greatest source of the
Nile is its upstream riparians, especially in Ethiopia where more than 86 % of the
waters of the Nile come from. The main annual rainfall, including the six inch winter
rainfall along the Mediterranean strip, is less than an inch. Not only are the waters of
Ethiopian origin most vital to the lower riparians, particularly Egypt, but also the
fertile soil that is carried down with the annual floods from the Ethiopian highlands
in the form of silt.
65 For a detailed description, see Alfred Namrath: Egypt the land between sun and Nile, Kummer and Frey.
Berne. 1920 p.32
66 A.H. Garretson.: The law of international drainage basin. Ocean A Publication Inc., New York. 1969 p. 256.
See also W.A. Hence.: The geography of Modern Africa. Colombia Picture Press, New York. 1967 p. 119
62
As a matter of fact, Ethiopia's loss of alluvial soil is enormous according to the FAO
reports. The Blue Nile Basin annually loses one centimeter depth of soil on average.
According to the assumption that the Ethiopian highlands constitute approximately
40 % of the total area: and the annual loss of soil is estimated to amount to 960
million tons.18 During the 19th and 20th century the Egyptian Government hoped to
control the Nile waters in such a way that the floods would remain within the banks,
thus securing the availability of water throughout the year for permanent irrigation
and for expanding land under irrigation. Egypt's plan to construct the Great Century
Dam in upper Egypt was unacceptable to Sudan, because of the following reasons:
Sudan wanted the assurance of a good portion of the water for storage.
To obtain good compensation for the loss of land under the dam.
To obtain compensation for the resettlement and rehabilitation of the
people who would be forced to abandon the area as a result of inundation
of the proposed dam.
After a lengthy dispute which lasted for years, finally they came to a compromising
agreement. Inter alia, the Sudan's share of the water to rise to one-third. Hence,
Sudan would get 18.5 billion cu.m. Egypt further agreed to pay $15,000,000 for the
resettlement and rehabilitation of the evacuees from Wady Halfa, the area which
would be inundated.19 When the agreement of 1959 was signed, the work on the
construction of the Great Aswan Dam went ahead in 1960.
The first and largest man-made lake on earth with a reservoir of 591 kilometers long,
was constructed. The high dam would replace the old Aswan Dam and has a capacity
to release 1500 tons of water every second, for irrigation druing times of drought. 20 It
68 V. Weingarten.: The Nile: Life line of Egypt. Britain. Frederick Muller. 1960 p.90
63
was further estimated that the new dam would extend cultivated land by 1.3 million
acres and application of permanent irrigation on 70,000 acres using the basin
system.21 More importantly it was envisaged to protect Egypt secure from floods.
The improved drainage of the land would provide a considerable amount of hydro-
electric power and also improve navigation below the dam. While designing such a
big structure, Egypt did not bother to consult other riparians. Among the ten
riparians, only Sudan was able to extract the earlier mentioned concession from
Egyptians. It was an Egyptian grant of rights, rather than Sudan's assertion of their
rights. The upper basin riparians interests were simply ignored.
The newly inaugurated Sinai and Kaharga Dkhla water division projects were
constructed without consultation or prior agreement of the upstream countries. The
El Salam Project requires 4.45 billion cu.m in Sinai, that is out of valley of Kharya
and Dkhla began in 1981 and the canal inaugurated in November 1996. Tow canals
link the Nile and Lake Nasser to the new artificial lake with a reservoir of 6000
km, impounding which would contain 120 billion cu.m. It was also planned that
200,000 hectares of land woud be under irrigation. Whilst implementing such a huge
project with the supposedly common water resources of the Nile, Egypt neither
consulted upstream riparians, nor secured any agreement from them. This was an
unilateral action by Egypt,( the lower riparian) and has set a precedent for upstream
riparians for their own unilateral option on the Nile waters. Egypt, in the future has
no choice but to cooperate with regard to the Nile Basin.
Egypt's total population is about 62.9 million (1995), of which 55 % is rural, with an
annual demographic growth estimated at 2.1 %. The average population density is 63
inhabitants per square kilometer, but ranges from 2 inhabitants per square kilometer
70 All irrigation is full or partial control irrigation. Over 95 % of the area is irrigated from the
Nile water.
64
over 96 % of the total area to 1,429 inhabitants per square kilometer in the Nile
Valley and Delta. This area, where the population density is amongst the highest in
the world, represents only 4 % of the total area.
Environmental Challenges
J. Sudan
Brief Geographical Description
Sudan is situated in the eastern corner of Africa, and is the largest African country
with a total area of about 2.5 million km. In the north-east it is bordered with the
Red Sea and it shares common borders with nine countries: Eritrea and Ethiopia in
the east; Kenya, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo in the south; the
Central African Republic, Chad and Libya in the west, and Egypt in the north. Sudan
consists of a flat internal plain, lying at about 325 meters above sea level. It is
intersected by the Nile River and its tributaries and by a number of mountains. In the
south is the Sudd Region, the great wetland which is a maze of channels, lakes and
swamps. The most remarkable feature of the Sudd area is its flatness: for 400 km22
from south to north, the slope is a mere 0.01 % and much of it is still flatter. The soil
found in the area is generally clayish and poor in nutrients. The northern part of the
country is covered by a sandy desert with mobile and fixed sand dunes in the north-
71 G.M. Craig (ed).: The agriculture of Sudan, Oxford University Press. 1991
65
western part (which is considered to be an extension of the eastern outskirts of the
great desert).
Climatic Factors
The climate of the Sudan varies from continental in the northern parts, savannah in
the centre, to equatorial in its most southern parts. Rainfall varies from 20 mm per
year in the north to some 1600 mm per year in the far south. The average annual
rainfall is 436 mm.
Sudan is the second country to make big use of the Nile waters. The main part of the
Nile is formed by the confluence of the Blue Nile and the White Nile in the capital
Khartoum before flowing into Egypt. Agriculture is the main economic sector of the
country and most of the agricultural development projects are located along the Nile
and its branches. Modern agricultural schemes commenced in the Sudan as early as
the 1920's. The Gezira Scheme, the first of its kind in the continent, started in the
1920's. The gigantic Sennar Dam on the Blue Nile was built in 1925. The Gezira
Agricultural Scheme was supplied with water from this dam. Initially a quarter of a
million acres was put under irrigation.
In 1937 another dam was constructed at Jebel Aulia on the White Nile, some 40
kilometers south of Khartoum. As part of the 1959 Nile Waters agreement, Egypt
accepted that Sudan could build a dam at Raseires on the Blue Nile.23 The central
section of this structure rises 60m above the river bed. The storage capacity is 3
TMM and it could be raised by 12 m to increase its capacity to 7.6 TMM. The
dam which was completed in 1967 was equipped with 250,000 W generators and
72 The Democratic Republic of the Sudan: The Gezira Scheme, past and present. January
1970
66
another five could be installed if needed. Some of the water is used for the managil
extension of the Gezira Project.
The Kenana Scheme on the left bank of the Blue Nile was planned as a future
development. Khasim El-Girba Dam Project on the Atbara River, with a capacity of
irrigating 100,000 hectares, was completed in 1964. According to the official
statement of the Sudanese Government in 1970, the Gezira Scheme alone constituted
12 % of the total area cultivated in the Sudan. The scheme produced 75% of the
country's main products, "long staple cotton", 12 % of the country's production of
Durra, 15 % of groundnuts, 50 % of wheat. Moreover, the statement affirmed that
the Gezira Scheme constituted the largest scheme under one management in the
world.
The scheme which covers 2.3 million acres between the Blue Nile and White Nile
produced about 250,000 tons of cotton in 1976/77 and 350,000 tons in 1977/78. 24In
the Rahad Valley, a project costing US $34.6 million was designed in 1977, for an
irrigation of 820,000 acres, and was financed by the World Bank, Kuwait and the
USA.25 Based on the proposal of the Sudanese Government in December 1973 and
upon the endorsement of Arab countries with the budget of US $6,000 million Arab
holding companies were to be formed for the implementation of a joint master plan
for agricultural development in Sudan.26 According to the details of the plan of the
Kuwait-based "Arab fund for Economic and Social Development (AFESD)", the
plan aimed to provide the Arab countries in ten years time with 35-40 percent of
74 Ibid p. 7310
67
their food needs.27 The capital was to be shared among Saudi Arabia, Kuwait,
Quatar, The United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Sudan, Iraq and possibly Syria.28This was
a grand design to make Sudan the basket of the Middle East with the Nile waters and
Arab funding.
In Sudan, the steamer navigation on the Nile covers more distance than in any other
riparian country in the basin. This land water transport provides the cheapest
communication between northern and southern provinces. The joint Egyptian-
Sudanese project of digging in the 280 km Janglei Canal between Malakal and
Janglei served a multi-purpose, i.e.:
To decrease the loss of water in the Sudan by evaporation;
To increase the water flow to lower Sudan and Egypt, and
To draw the surface water into the bank of the canal and thus cultivable
land would be reclaimed in the upper Sudan. Furthermore the canal was to
facilitate a navigable short distance between Malakal and Janglei.
The Janglei Project has been disrupted since 1983 due to the civil war in Sudan.
Other development activities in the Nile Basin of Sudan included a 500,00 acres
farm project by Tenaco at dinder beside the Blue Nile 29, 35,000 acres of land by a
Sudanese-Egyptian company, and the Nile to be harnessed jointly for more hydro-
electric power production. Other joint development plans were envisaged, including
a 1,000,000 acre farm was to be developed in eight years time by the joint Sudanese-
Egyptian company.30
76 Ibid p. 13
77 Ibid p. 15
78 Middle East Economic Digest, Weekly News Analysis and Forecast, Vol. 23, No.1,
January 5, 1979.
68
Population Growth and Water Demand
Environmental Challenges
In this chapter, a comparative analysis was made of each individual state with regard
to its geographical advantage, climatical conditions, available water potential for
developmental needs, population dynamics and environmental problems. The hydro-
political methodology was used by grouping the riparian countries into lower and
upper regions, according to their geographical location. In the 21st century the Nile
Basin will encounter complex problems. The facts contained in this chapter
80 World Bank: Sudan Reversing the economic decline. Country Economic Memorandum.
81P. Howell, M. Lock & S. Cobb (eds.).: The Janglei Canal: impact and opportunity,
Cambridge University Press. 1988
69
illuminate the concern. As the population growth increases in the Nile Basin, the
need for water will increase. The danger of drought, (to which the upper riparian
countries of the Horn of Africa are prone) is a virtual threat. Deforestation,
environmental degradation, desertification, and pollution in the basin all have serious
consequences for the future as it was clearly demonstrated in this chapter.
Among the lower riparian countries, Egypt, without making any contribution, still
has the lion's share of the Nile water. This type of uneven distribution can no longer
continue. The Egyptian Hegemony, through its foreign policy aims to have full
control of the Nile instead of negotiating a rational and equitable share of the Nile
water. The reason is simple. The other riparian countries of the Nile all have a
rapidly growing population and also have plans for the development of their water
resources. The challenge facing the riparian countries of the Nile Basin requires the
development of mechanisms for a joint solution comprising of legal, economic and
ecological issues with the objective to forge cooperation amongst the riparians, most
of whom have done very little in the past to benefit from the blessings of this
immense natural resource.
CHAPTER III
The Nile's vast natural resources attracted European colonial powers after the fall of
the Ottoman Empire in the 18th century. Egypt wanted to control the source of the
Nile, and might have done so if Emperor Yohannes IV of Ethiopia had not
successfully defended his country at Gundet and Gura in 1875 and 1876,
70
respectively.33 After the European colonial powers penetrated into the continent and
created their zones of influence, Britain's control over Egypt lasted until 1937, and
over the Sudan from 1899 until 1956.34 Italy entered the Horn of Africa via Eritrea,
and France and Belgium became colonial neighbours in Equatoria. Ethiopia was the
only country to remain independent despite numerous attempts by the Italians to
colonise it.
Most of the agreements concluded during and after the colonial era took cognisance
of Egyptian concerns regarding the waters of the Nile. The Nile has been a major
aspect of the relations between Ethiopia and Egypt. Egypt has totally depended on
the Nile for its early civilization. The geographical location of Ethiopia as the main
origin of the Nile signed between former colonial powers with a view to protecting
their influence in the subsequent insearity of the Egyptian renders the relations of the
two countries full of tension and the mistrust.
The presence of British colonizers in Egypt and the Sudan during the 19th and early
20th centuries basically dictated the state of affairs. British colonialism in north-east
Africa wanted to secure its interest in the Nile to ensure the production and export of
cotton for its industries in England. To this effect, the British concluded various
agreements with those states of the Nile under their control to secure the unfettered
flow of water to Egypt.
83 McCaffrey, S.C.:"Water politics and international law." in Gleick, P.H. (ed) Water in
Crisis: a Guide to the World's Freshwater Resources New York. 1993 p. 94.
71
"Great Britain created patterns of water utilization which favoured a single state
35
(Egypt) at the expense of the interests of the whole basin". As the British never had
any control over Ethiopia, they tried different strategies to achieve their objective is to
bring Ethiopia under their sphere of influence. Italy, harbouring colonial designs on
Ethiopia came handy in this ploy. In the late 19th and the early 20th centuries, Great
Britain was the colonial administrator of the Sudan and had strong similar interests in
Egypt. From 1884 onwards, the British "Informal Protectorate" controlled the
utilization of the Nile waters; favouring Egypt and to a lesser degree the Sudan. The
implementation of the "informal protectorate" over the whole of the Nile Basin was
facilitated by the fact that all upper riparian states, excluding Ethiopia and the Congo,
were by then under British colonial rule. The main purpose of this scheme was to
promote the interest of Egypt. The British engineers implemented models that gave an
overwhelming dominance to Egypt over the utilization of the Nile.
It is important to note that when the legal regime in the Nile was in force during the
colonial period, the British made a series of dramatic concessions to Egypt at the
expense of other colonial possessions. Sudan, however, was not motivated by good-
neighbourliness and the principle of Sic utere tuo ut aliemum non lovedas. It was
solely motivated by the desire to protect the security of the communications of the
British Empire in Egypt and by the hope of having a more friendly Egyptian
government to deal with in regard to other matters of more immediate interest to
great Britain.
84Kliot, N.: Water Resources and Conflict in the Middle East, Routledge, London & New
York, 1994. p.51.
72
These considerations formed the basis for the controversial recognition by the British
of the natural and historical rights of Egypt in the waters of the Nile. The legal
regime which evolved within the context of the "informal protectorate" of the British
over the Nile River Basin resulted in a number of treaties concluded by the British
with the upper riparian states. With the end of British colonial rule in the area, Egypt
pursued the same objective and claimed the whole of the Nile waters for its exclusive
benefit through various schemes. Egypt tried to implement the same policy that
Great Britain applied to the Nile Basin; but unlike Egypt Britain was in control of the
upper riparian countries.36 Despite this, however, Egypt has skilfully manoeuvred in
the region to ensure virtual monopoly over the Nile waters.
Most of these treaties were not essentially agreements over the waters of the Nile;
they were rather predominantly border treaties, either among colonial powers or
between colonial powers and Egypt or Ethiopia. Due to the lack of reliable reference
material that clarifies this point, a significant portion of the information on the early
treaties was derived from W. Tilahun's 1979 "Egypt's Imperial Aspirations over
Lake Tana and the Blue Nile". As the title implies, this book is permeated with
biases and rhetoric, but the authenticity of the historical facts contained in the book
were critically verified. Other independent sources were also researched.
85Bullock, J. & Darwish, A.: Water Wars, Coming Conflicts in the Middle East Victor
Gallancy, London, p. 105.
73
3.1.1 The Anglo-Italian Protocol of 1891
This protocol was signed on April 15th, 1891. The treaty was intended to define the
colonial territorial claims of Great Britain and Italy and the demarcation of their
respective spheres of influence in Eastern Africa. In Article III of this protocol, the
issues concerning the Nile River were addressed:
Ethiopia, a riparian country of the Atbara river, was not a co-signatory of this
protocol. Secondly, Article III of this protocol mainly sought to protect the Egyptian
interests in the Nile waters. The Article also stipulated:
One of the earliest agreements regarding the waters of the Blue Nile was the treaty
between Great Britain and Emperor Menelik of Ethiopia, which was signed on May
15th, 1902, in Addis Ababa. This agreement basically regulated the frontiers
between Ethiopia and the Sudan. It also contained a peculiar Article III on the use of
the waters of the Nile which stated:
86 Tilahun, W.: Egypt's Imperial aspirations over Lake Tana and the Blue Nile, United
Printers Ltd., Addis Ababa, 1979, p. 75
87 Waterbury, J . Op cit, p. 2.
74
"His Majesty the Emperor Menelik II, King of Kings of Ethiopia, engages himself
towards the Government of His Britannic Majesty not to construct or allow to be
constructed any work on the Blue Nile, Lake Tana, or the Sobat, which would arrest
the flow of their waters except in agreement with His Britannic Majesty's
Government and the Government of Sudan".39
Under this agreement, Emperor Menelik entered into an obligation "not to construct
or allow to be constructed" structures that would arrest the flow of the waters of the
Nile. The assurance was given that no unilateral and complete "stoppage" of the Nile
would occur before a mutually acceptable agreement was reached. According to the
Amharic40 version, as long as Menelik did not "stop" the flow of the waters, except
in agreement with the Government of Sudan, Egypt could not claim any rights from
this agreement. This was one of the most controversial treaties regarding the River
Nile issue.
The treaty was signed with a colonial power that no longer existed;
90Waterbury, J.: "Legal and Institutional Arrangement for Managing Water Resources in the
Nile Basin", Vol.3, No.2 , 1989, p. 94
75
Unlike the English version, the Amharic version of the treaty obligated
Ethiopia only to Great Britain, not to Sudan, and
Even if the treaty was assumed to be currently applicable, it only obligated
Ethiopia "not to arrest", that is, not to fully stop the flow of the tributaries
of the Nile (specifying that no dam should be built across the Blue Nile,
Lake Tana, or Sobat, that might impede the flow of the Nile.
On December 13th, 1906, the agreement between Great Britain, France and Italy
was signed in London. This agreement was signed without consulting Ethiopia. In
Article IV of this agreement, the three colonial powers agreed to act together and to
safeguard the interests of Great Britain and Egypt in the Nile Basin, more
particularly as regards the regulation of the waters of that river and its tributaries
(due consideration being paid to local interests) without prejudice to Italian
interests.42 Emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia immediately notified the contracting
parties that he rejected the agreement. The Emperor stated:
"But let it be understood that this arrangement in no way limits what we consider
our sovereign rights."43
In effect, the Emeperor's rejection of this agreement was a revision, if not a total
recall, of the May 15th, 1902 treaty between Ethiopia and Great Britain. This so-
called tripartite treaty was considered by Ethiopia to be a sinister colonial ploy
directed against the sovereignty of Ethiopia.
91 Okidi, C.O.: "History of the Nile & Lake Victoria Basins through Treaties", In Howell, P.P. & Allan, J.A.
(eds), The Nile: resources evaluation, resource management and hydropolicies & legal issues London School of
Oriental and African Studies & The Royal Geographical Society, 1990, pp. 193-224.
92 Tilahun, W.: Egypt's Imperial Aspirations over Lake Tana and the Blue Nile, United Printers Ltd., Addis
Ababa, 1979, p. 75.
76
3.1.4 The 1925 Anglo-Italian Exchange of Notes
In November 1919, recognizing Great Britain's interest in Lake Tana, Italy made
concessions to Great Britain, and offered assistance to help it obtain (from
Ethiopia), a concession to construct a barrage (dam) on Lake Tana. The 1925 Anglo-
Italian conspiracy against Ethiopians concocted as a result of Britain's continued
efforts to pursue its interests in controlling the headwaters of the Blue Nile. When
Britain realized that it could not succeed in obtaining a concession directly from
Ethiopia, it pursued its objectives indirectly through Italy. As a result of the Anglo-
Italian discussions, Great Britain accepted Italy's offer and subsequent Anglo-Italian
negotiations produced an agreement in the form of an Exchange of Notes. These
notes included statements that bound the Italian Government to:
"Recognize the prior hydraulic rights of Egypt and the Sudan ... not to construct on
the headwaters of the Blue Nile and the White Nile (the Sobat) and their tributaries
and affluents any work which might sensibly modify their flow into the main rivers.93
This Anglo-Italian agreement was an attack on its sovereignty, and on June 15th,
1926, the Ethiopian Government dispatched notes to the British and Italian
Governments. The note dispatched to the British Government contained an
additional paragraph, which read in part:
"The negotiations would have been concluded with us. We would never have
suspected that the British Government would come to an agreement with another
government regarding our lake."94
At Ethiopia's request, both the British and the Italian Governments explained their
actions to the League of Nations, but denied challenging Ethiopia's sovereignty over
93 Ibid 91
94 Ibid 94
77
Lake Tana.95 The British and Italian ploy was effectively challenged and the
agreement never materialized.
On May 7th, 1929, an exchange of notes took place between the Egyptian Prime-
Minister, Mohammed Mahmoud Pasha, and the British High Commissioner, Lord
Lloyd, who was acting on behalf of Sudan. This exchange became known as the
1929 Nile Water Agreement. By virtue of this agreement, Egypt recognized the
Sudan's right to water adequate enough for its own development, as long as Egypt's
"natural and historic rights" were protected. According to this agreement:96
Egypt's share was 48 billion cu.m. (BCM), whereas that of Sudan was 4
BCM;
The entire seasonal flow of the Nile River, vital for winter crops, was
reserved for Egypt;
Egypt assumed the right to monitor upstream flows;
Egypt assumed the right to undertake projects without the consent of
upstream states, and
Egypt assumed the right to veto any construction projects that would affect
its interests adversely.
The imbalance of this treaty is evident, as it favours Egypt over the remaining
riparian states. Thus, this agreement was made mainly to secure the Nile water for
Egypt by limiting the rights of Sudan and by rejecting those of the remaining
riparians. Ethiopia in particular did not recognize the validity of the agreement, nor
did it ever accept Egypt's claim to acquired or historic rights. Moreover, as the
95 Ibid 94
96 O'Cannel, D.P.: State Successions in Municipal Law & International Law ,Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, Vol. II, 1967, p. 247,
78
agreement was signed between Egypt and Britain, it could not have a binding effect
on Ethiopia. According to the principle of treaty making, an agreement made
between two parties cannot have a binding effect on a third party without its consent.
Other riparian countries have also questioned the validity of the 1929 agreement and
had eventually repudiated it after attaining independence. After independence, Sudan
criticized the agreement as having been motivated by Great Britain to maintain good
relations with Egypt at the expense of Sudan's interest.
It formally repudiated the agreement in 1959 on the argument, inter alia, that
"economic and technical development since 1929 had rendered these provisions
obsolescent".97 Among the riparian states, Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya did not
consider themselves bound by the 1929 treaty. The 1929 agreement became a base
for the next agreement, called the 1959 Nile Water Agreement. This was a bilateral
agreement and opened a door for Egypt and the Sudan to acquire rights to the
resources of the Nile and for the full utilization of its waters.
This agreement was concluded in 1932 between Egypt and Britain for the benefit of
farmers. The agreement allowed Egypt to regulate the flows of the White Nile,
primarily to supply enough water for its winter crops by constructing a regulation
dam at Jebel Awliya (upstream of Khartoum). The agreement was a direct derivative
of the 1929 Nile Water Agreement. In 1952 a supplementary document was signed
between the two parties to increase the capacity of the Jebel Awliya reservoir by
raising the height of the dam. Raising the height of the Sennar dam and the
construction of another dam (both in Sudan) were also included in this
supplementary agreement. In this agreement, the parties undertook to revise
arrangements for the operations of the dam whenever other dams or installations
97 Ibid, p. 247.
79
became operative. This would coordinate the operation of control in the basin
pursuant to a general recognition of the unity of the Nile Valley.
It allowed restricted use by the upstream riparian territory, but it is not clear
what percentage of water abstracted was expected to be restored, or
whether consumptive water use was allowed at all, and
Unlike the majority of Nile treaties, it had no direct objective to protect the
interests of Egypt or the Sudan.
After months of intense negotiations, Egypt and Great Britain exchanged notes on
May 30th and May 31st, 1949, in which they agreed to cooperate in the construction
of the Owen Falls Dam on Lake Victoria, and to initiate other water projects in the
98 Text in the United Nations Legislation texts and treaty provisions concerning the utilization of international
rivers for other purposes than navigation, New York, 1963, p. 27.
99 Ntambirweki, J.: "Colonial treaties and the legal regime of the Nile Valley: Re-thinking the legal framework
into the 21st century", paper presented at the 4th Nile 2002 Conference, Kampala, Uganda, 1996.
80
Nile, in Equatorial. The construction of the Owen Falls dam had the following
purposes:
To generate hydro-electric power in British Uganda, and
To use Lake Victoria as a storage reservoir for the benefit of Egypt.
The agreement provided provisions for Egypt's financial contribution for
the construction of the dam and the commitments Egypt had to make to
compensate the Uganda Electricity Board for the loss of hydro-electric
power incurred as a result.
The Uganda Electricity Board assumes the overall responsibility of the
construction of the dam;
As an extension of the Owen Falls Agreement, Egypt and Great Britain also agreed
in February 1950, to cooperate in hydrological and meteorological surveys to be
undertaken inside Ugandan. As a result of this agreement, the Owen Falls Dam was
completed in 1954.
The 1959 agreement was concluded between Egypt and Sudan to the total exclusion
of other Nile riparian states. It was not Sudan's concern, but mainly Egypt's that
gave am impetus to the 1959 bilateral agreement. This agreement gave a chance for
full control and utilization of the annual Nile flow. In 1950 Egypt planned the Aswan
High Dam Project to store the entire annual flow of the Nile waters. Before
implementing this project, Egypt realized it was important to seek a guarantee from
the Sudan and obtain international recognition for the financing and technology of
the dam. "By 1955 all that stood in the way of beginning construction of the Aswan
High Dam were the problems of hard currency funding and the need to reach an
agreement with the Sudan in allocating the Nile waters."100
100 Waterbury, J.: Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley, Syracuse University Press, New York, 1979. p. 102 .
81
In addition, Sudan argued that its population was about 12 million-half that of Egypt.
Sudan also rejected the education of Aswan storage losses when calculating the
allocation. Accordingly, Sudan claimed 15 BCM for itself, limiting Egypt's net share
(after deducting the 10 BCM for evaporation losses) to 59 BCM. Sudan further
claimed that irrigating 5.5 million acres (about 2.22 million ha) of land would
require 44 BCM of Nile river waters (equivalent to 35 BCM, as measured at
Aswan).101 The debate over the claims delayed the agreement, but whether or not
Sudan agreed, the construction of the Aswan High Dam was seen as a development
priority for Egypt. One way or another, the Sudan had to come to commit itself to the
agreement. Finally, on November 8th, 1959, the agreement for the full utilization of
the Nile Waters was signed between Egypt and the Sudan. Both countries are not
contributors of the Nile; but only users. This agreement was signed without inviting
other riparian states to join the debate and parts of the agreement. The 1959
agreement contained the following most important points:
The acquired rights of Egypt and Sudan are 48 BCM and 7 BCM,
respectively.
The controversy regarding the quantity of the average annual Nile
flow was settled and agreed to be about 84 BCM measured at the Aswan
High Dam in Egypt.
The agreement granted Egypt the right to construct the Aswan High
Dam. This dam could store the entire annual Nile River flow.
The agreement also granted to the Sudan the right to construct the
Rossaries Dam on the Blue Nile, and to develop other means of irrigation
and hydro-electric power stations until it fully utilized its Nile share.
The average annual storage losses due to evaporation and other factors
were estimated to be about 10 BCM. This quantity would be deducted from
the yield of the Nile river before allocation.
When the agreement was signed, most of the upper White Nile riparian countries
were under British or Belgian colonial rule with the exception of Ethiopia. The two
colonial powers spoke for their colonies whenever a Nile-related issue was raised.
Regarding the 1959 Nile Water agreement, Great Britain sent notes in August 1959
to Egypt, Sudan, Belgium and Ethiopia, in which it reserved rights for its last
African colonies. The following statement was made by the British regarding this
issue:103
"Their position must be safeguarded, and His Majesty's government have informed
the government of Egypt and the Sudan that they formally reserve the right to
negotiate for a fair share of the waters of the Nile for these territories at the
appropriate time. ... in the face of these formal reservations, there is no reason why
102 Collins, R.O.: The Waters of the Nile: Hydropolitics and the Janglei Canal, 1900-1988 Oxford, 1990, pp.
400-413.
103 Tilahun, W.: Op cit, p. 44.
83
any increase in irrigation purporting to appropriate water to which there territories
have a legitimate claim should be protected under international law as established
users."
Great Britian's opposition to the 1959 agreement was reinforced by its call in the
same year, for "an international conference to assure the rights of all riparian states,
and to set up an international Nile waters authority, of which the United Kingdom
would be a member."104 As the agreement did not include other riparians, Ethiopia in
particular, (both during the negotiations and at the conclusion of this agreement) had
rejected its validity, while the 1929 agreement clearly stipulated the long-standing
position of Egypt on the principle of "acquired rigths" or "priority of appropriation"
of the Nile waters; the 1959 agreement made a clear departure from its predecessor
by abandoning the use of the term 'acquired rights'. "Only in the 1959 agreement did
Egypt distance itself from the long held position of absolute territorial integrity and
accepted the principle of more equitable allocations of water."105
The 1959 agreement had implicitly accepted the evolving principle of equitable
utilization by recognising the right of the Sudan to 18.5 BCM of water.106 In
practice, however, Egypt's use of the Nile waters still reflected its adherence more to
absolute territorial integrity than to equitable utilization.
The 1959 agreement is regarded by many as the most important to date, despite the
fact that it did not include the other riparian states. In essence, this agreement was
the last Nile Waters agreement before the end of colonialism in that part of Africa.
The 1960s were characterized by the emergence of newly independent states and the
beginning of a new era in the continent. Among riparian countries of the Nile (all
being former British colonies), Tanzania became independent in 1960, Uganda in
1962, Kenya in 1963 and the Congo (DRC) in 1960. The other two former Belgian
colonies: Burundi and Rwanda also got their independence in 1962, These countries
inherited unfair and unbalanced agreements and treaties which were concluded on
their behalf by colonial powers and other third parties. In this respect, no Ethiopian
Government recognized the various treaties including the 1959 one. This non-
recognition of the colonially inspired treaties was also shared by other upstream
riparian states, particularly Tanzania, where Julius Nyerere (the first president of
Tanzania) repeatedly dismissed the treaties as nil and void and non-binding. Ethiopia
has always been consistent in its position regarding the utilization of the waters of
the Nile for irrigation and hydro-power generation.
This section highlights and examines some of the few agreements signed after the
demise of colonialism and presents some important international cooperative efforts
in post-colonial Nile Basin.
The Egyptian Government formulated a century storage scheme in 1940 for the
development of the Nile, which was calculated based on the future needs of Egypt
and the Sudan.107 This project was realised within the framework of the permanent
joint technical committee established under the Nile Water Agreement of 1959. This
century storage scheme (CSS) was a plan to build an over year flow regulation
structures throughout the Nile River Valley. Lake Victoria was to be used as a major
over-year storage reservoir, with Lake George and Lake Tana supplementing it.
Lakes Kyoga and Albert would operate in tandem with Lakes Victoria and George to
107 Hurst, Black & Simaika, The Future Conservation of The Nile, Cairo, 1946, Vol. VII.
85
regulate the discharge into the Victoria Nile and the Bahr Jebel. The main purpose of
the century storage scheme was to transport the regulated flow of the upper White
Nile River through the great swamps of the Sudd, as Waterbury explained:
"Half the total discharge of the Bahr El Jebel, or some 14 BCM, are herein lost
through evaporation each year. Over-year storage at Victoria would go for nought if
the additional stored water could not be delivered through the swamps. Total losses
due to evaporation in the swamps, and comprising the spill-over of all the main
White Nile tributaries (Bahr El Ghazal and The Sobat) is on the average 40 BCM
per year. The problem therefore was to cut a channel through or a diversionary
canal around the swamp ... excavating a canal, known as the Jonglei, to take off
north of Juba at Ber and to skint the swamp to the east for some 280 km, delivering
its discharge to the Nile at Malakal. The Egyptian sought approval for this scheme
as early as 1938."108
This was how the Janglei Canal came in to operation. The proposed canal would
have a capacity of 55 million cu.m (MCM) per day and would make an additional 7
BCM of water available in downstream countries during the low flow months
(December to July). The canal plan was circulated and revised throughout the 1940s
and 50s, without any practical steps being taken. One of the tasks of the permanent
Joint Technical Commission (formed by the 1959 agreement), was to proceed with
the planning of the construction of the Janglei Canal; but it was not until 1974 that
Egypt and Sudan agreed to share the cost of building the canal. The contract was
awarded to a French consortium. The canal's channel would be 52 m. wide and 4 m.
deep. When completed, it would be 362 km long, twice the length of the Suez Canal.
In 1978, construction work began despite opposition from various quarters, e.g.
environmental, political, local and international groups. In 1982, construction ceased
due to the civil war in Southern Sudan, and the fate of the Janglei Canal remains
uncertain.
108 Waterbury, J.: Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley, Syracuse University Press, New York.,1979, p. 89-90.
86
3.2.2 The 1993 Ethio-Egyptian Framework Agreement
The framework for general cooperation between Ethiopia and Egypt was signed on
July 1st, 1993, in Cairo. The agreement was neither a binding nor has it settled all
the disputes between the two countries; though it has symbolic value. The
significance of signing the document is that it represented the first attempt by the two
sides that they should tackle the very serious challenge of them. In the agreement,
five of the eight articles directly addressed the Nile river issues.
They were:-
Article 4: The two parties agree that the issue of the use of the Nile waters shall be
worked out in detail through discussions by experts from both sides, on the basis of
the rules and principles of international law.
Article 5: Each party shall refrain from engaging in any activity related to the Nile
Waters that may cause "appreciable harm" to the interests of the other party.
Article 6: The two parties agree on the necessity of the conservation and protection
of the Nile waters. In this regard they undertake to consult and cooperate in projects
that are mutually advantageous, such as projects that would enhance the volume of
flow and reduce the loss of Nile waters through comprehensive and integrated
development schemes.
Article 7: The two parties will create an appropriate mechanism for periodic
consultations on matters of mutual concern, including the Nile waters, in a manner
that would enable them to work together for peace and stability in the region.
Article 8: The two parties shall endeavour towards a framework effective
cooperation among countries of the Nile Basin for the promotion of common interest
in the development of the basin.109
Egypt tried to use the word "appreciable harm" as a blocking mechanism to prevent
Ethiopia from implementing various projects on the Blue Nile (or on other
"What we need is to basically treat the Nile Basin as a single region and a shared
natural resource. If we deal with the issue of the Nile on that basis, then we can
discuss and agree a framework that allows the countries along the Nile to find the
best ways of exploiting its water to the maximum."110
110 Pan-Arab-Al-Hayat interview with Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, May 1998.
88
causing appreciable harm to one another".111 In the declaration, both sides agreed to
work together to establish a Nile Basin Organisation. A similar agreement was
signed in December 1992 between Ethiopia and the Sudan as a result technical
advisory committees were formed. Bilateral meetings and contact between the
respective national committees were held regularly.
111 Waterbury, J.: "Waters of the Nile" Ethioscope Vol.1, No.1, 1994.
89
4. Basic Principles Applicable to the use of International
Water Resources
The Helsinki Rules, as they were first adopted by the ILA in 1966, explicitly
recognised the principle of "equitable utilization". However, they did not contain
any clause imposing a duty on the riparian states not to cause "appreciable harm".
This duty was included twenty years later in the ILA's 62nd session, held in Seoul,
1986. This could explain why the Helsiniki Rules mainly favoured the principle of
"equitable utilization" over the "no harm" rule. A major effort towards the
codification and progressive development of the rules of international law
(governing the non-navigational uses of international watercources) was made by the
International Law Commission in 1971 upon the recommendation of the United
Nations General Assembly. After 25 years of intense research, the Commission
finalised its studies in Geneva in the summer of 1994. These studies addressed the
90
non-navigational uses of international watercourses. The findings and
recommendations were submitted to the 51st session of the General Assembly.
Recently a substantial part of draft articles were approved, with the exception of a
few articles requiring further examination.
Compared to the 1966 Helsinki Rules, the 1994 draft articles of the International
Law Commission are more elaborate and comprehensive. Unlike the Helsinki Rules,
they include a provision for environmental issues. Since they are relatively new, the
draft articles are quoted directly in part II, "General Principles"112
112 The Law of the Non-navigational Uses of International Watercourses, UNGA, A/CN.4/L 493, 12 July 1994
91
attribute of sovereignty and is enjoyed by every state whose territory is traversed or
bordered by an international watercourse".113
Article 6 provided the factors which should be taken into account in order to
determine an equitable, reasonable and optimal utilization. Such factors, though not
exhaustive, comprise various elements e.g.: the population, climate, alternative
water supplies, hydrology, technology in use, development stage and economic
needs of the region. The source of a state's rights of equitable utilization depends on
the factors and circumstances of each individual case, and especially on weighing all
relevant factors. In the application of Article 5 (or paragraph 1) of this article, the
watercourse states concerned should, when the need arises, enter into consultation in
a spirit of cooperation. Another important article in the draft is the obligation of
states to exercise diligence in their utilization of an international watercourse in such
a way as not to cause significant harm to other watercourse states.114 The new draft
has made considerable change in the concept of degree of harm from "appreciable
harm" in the previous draft to "significant harm". This change is very important in
that it raised the level of accountability of an upper riparian state, which may cause
damage to a lower riparian state from "appreciable harm" to "significant harm".
Through such a change, it has been recognized that the damage caused to the lower
riparian state should be "significant".
Concerning the two principles, the draft clearly showed its preference for "equitable
use" to "significant harm". Some have even argued on making "equitable" the sole
criterion for use by deleting "significant harm". The final draft, however, although
giving priority to "equitable use", has tried to maintain a delicate balance between
the two concepts. If a certain use of water of an international watercourse by an
113 The Law of the Non-navigational Uses of International Watercourses, UNGA, A/Cn. 4/L
493, 12 July 1994. p. 28.
114 Article 7 (1) of the International Law Commission's Draft Framework Convention.
92
upper riparian state causes significant harm on the lower riparian state, there is an
obligation on such states to enter into consultation on the question whether the
planned use was equitable, on ad hoc adjustments to the project and, where
appropriate, on the question of compensation.115 The problem in the Nile Basin, is
the reluctance to recognise the basic principles of international law which have
gained universal acceptance, and which have been applied by almost all other
international river systems in the apportionment of water rights.
As far as the Nile is concerned, there is no single legal statement or agreement which
acknowledges that all the co-riparian states have rights to its water resources or that
these rights are limited in any way and an guided by the principle of trust and
equitable water sharing.116 The draft law of non-navigational uses of international
watercourse prescribed a general obligation on co-riparian states to participate in
negotiations and consultations. More than ever before, there is an urgent need for
redistribution of the Nile waters of today as the existing utilization is grossly unjust
and ignores the legitimate rights of other riparian states. The status quo should not be
allowed to continue, as it does not promote cooperation among the Nile states for the
optimal utilization of their untapped resources. There is an imperative need for
negotiation on the utilization of the Nile to avoid a potential crisis arising from
separate actions instituted by every riparian state.
As in many parts of the world, the end of the Cold War Era brought relief to the Nile
Basin region. The danger of confrontation seems less acute and the current level of
cooperation is indeed remarkable. Due to this and other factors, Egypt can no longer
maintain the status quo and monopoly over the Nile waters. However, despite the
115 Article 7 (2) of the International Law Commission Draft Framework Convention.
116 Kliot, N.: Water Resources and Conflict in the Middle East Routledge, London & New York, 1994. p. 51.
93
shift from confrontation to cooperation in the relations among some riparian states of
the basin others still persist in their firm position by denying the legitimate right of
other riparians to an equitable use of an international watercourse. This creates an
obstacle for any meaningful negotiation on the waters of the Nile. The demands of
Egypt concerning the Nile are not only limited to satisfying their interests. Egypt will
not be satisfied just to ensure its water needs, but would like to have full control of
the Nile waters within its territory, which leaves no room for negotiation with upper
riparian states.
The role of the international community (and in particular the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund (IMF)), is encouraging and supports the process of
negotiation on the use of the Nile waters. Some hard and fast rules should be set for
the financing of projects that affect international watercourses. The international
community should be urged to make a positive contribution to facilitate negotiation
and to promote the positive application of the basic principles of international law in
the distribution of water resources among riparian states of the Nile. They should
encourage negotiation and refrain from giving unreserved support to states which
may block any effort for a water-sharing arrangement between the watercourse states
of the Nile.
The basic understanding reached between Ethiopia and Sudan on application of the
principle of "equitable utilization" and duty not to cause "appreciable harm" is
encouraging. Also Ethiopia and Egypt have agreed to abide by be the principles of
International Law. This constitutes a framework for cooperation by which the three
countries negotiate on the equitable utilization of the waters of the Nile. The
negotiations of the three countries on the eastern Nile sub-basin level has progressed
well.
94
CHAPTER IV
THE NILE BASIN COUNTRIES: FROM CONFRONTATION
TO COOPERATION - A NEW TREND/PERSPECTIVE
This chapter will examine the existing obstacles impeding the development of the
Nile Basin. Development issues concerning the Nile Basin will be followed by a
discussion of the recent measures taken to forge cooperation between the Nile
riparian countries. Some plausible solutions will also be suggested which seem to be
accepted by all countries along the basin.
There are several factors which hindered genuine cooperation in the past. The main
factors can be summarised as follows: Firstly, the continous reluctance of the
downstream states, especially Egypt, to engage in an open negotiation process on the
equitable distribution of the waters. Egypt was particularly reluctant to involve major
upstream states (such as Ethiopia) in its water management regimes despite
Ethiopia's substantial contribution to the in-flow of the waters. Secondly, the
divergence of views among the riparians on how to use the water taking into account
their contributions and demands. Egypt, for example, argued that the absence of
sufficient data and information was an obstacle to any negotiation on the sharing of
the waters of the Nile. Therefore they distanced themselves from the key issues of
the river. Thirdly, the biased treatment of international agencies and donaor countries
has also adversely affected the bilateral as well as the muti-lateral relationships
among the riparian states. The former Soviet Union at one point gave a substantial
amount of financial assistance for the construction of the Aswan High Dam which
has greatly increased the irrigation capacity of Egypt and to a certain extent made
this country the only beneficiary of the water at the expense of others. The African
Development Bank, on the other hand, denied a loan to Ethiopia that was aimed at
95
harnessing the Blue Nile (Aleltu Hydro-electric Project) as Egypt managed to have
the loan blocked using its economic and political leverage.117
The lending policy of the World Bank also calls for a 'no objection stance' by co-
basin states for projects submitted to the bank by one of these countries. Although
the operational directive of the bank requires the consent of all the affected riparians
before releasing funds for water projects, the condition in the Nile Basin is such that
the downstream countries are consulted for projects undertaken in the upstream
countries for a 'no objection statement', while the upstream countries are not
consulted on projects undertaken in the downstream countries. For example, the
Ugandan Government was instructed by the World Bank to obtain a permit from
Egypt in order to secure a loan for the hydraulic works in Lake Victoria.118 Lastly,
civil war and political instability in most of the countries have often changed the
political climate of each state, and made it extremely difficult to achieve long-term
basin cooperation. In the 1970s and 1980s Ethiopia was, for example, in a
continuous civil war, that rendered the development and cooperation of the Nile
almost impossible. Likewise, due to the ongoing civil war the Sudanese Government
is not in a position to participate in any major cooperative schemes of the Nile.
2.Common Challenges
The Nile Basin countries face colossal challenges concerning their future water
resources development. These challenges present themselves in terms of complex
social, economic, political, nature-related problems, which call for holistic and
integrated approaches. These countries must tackle these challenges so as to
contribute to the development of the basin for the benefit of all riparians.
117 Tafesse, T.: Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley: Retrospect & Prospect, Addis Ababa
University, 1997, p. 8
96
The key challenges in the Nile Basin are the following:-
Population growth: The population has doubled between 1960 and 1990 and will
grow almost five-fold between 1990 and 2025. The population of the Nile Basin is
estimated by the World Bank to exceed 600 million in 2025. Rapid urbanization
places the environment under excessive pressure. On the other hand, the increasing
number of people, the demand for more water is also inevitable.
Drought: There are cyclical occurrences of dry seasons. Drought has been
catastrophic in many parts of the countries. Experts believe that the major drought
cycle in Ethiopia occurs every ten (sometimes less) years. To a certain degree, all
Nile Basin countries have been affected by drought. The effects of drought can only
be mitigated by utilizing available water in the river systems.
These factors have created scarcity of water. In the Nile Basin countries find
themselves threatened by the ever -increasing water scarcity. The Nile Basin is one
of the most problem-ridden regions of the world.
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To be more specific, half of the riparian countries are among the world's ten poorest
countries. Yet the Nile holds great potentials to foster economic development. This
could be attained through power generation, food production, industrial
development, environmental conservation and other related development activities.
In order to realize this potential, the Nile Basin countries have come to recognise that
they must take concrete steps to address these challenges and that cooperative
development holds the greatest prospect of bringing prosperity to the whole region.
An earnest effort at breaking the current impasse over the Nile should begin by
removing the current psycho-political obstructions to dialogue and by taking
considering the commonalities into consideration. There is widespread poverty and
high dependence on agriculture. The riparian states are unable to feed themselves,
from domestic produce or afford to import food. The majority of riparian states don’t
have financial capacity to start large-scale engineering works, including water
projects. This has geared the Nile Basin states towards setting in motion various
forms of cooperation. As shown in this paper, poverty is the ultimate cause and the
main source of mistrust and conflict in the region. Alleviating poverty is not only
morally right; but also essential for meaningful and effective basin- wide
cooperation. The common challenges which all riparians face is making their
neighbours and co-basin partners to reach a satisfactory solution.
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3. The evaluation of a cooperative spirit in the Nile Basin
After gaining independence, the upper basin states of East Africa called for an
intensification of cooperation among the Nile Basin states. The control of regulation
of the equatorial lakes in the Nile River system would offer several advantages
bearing on the economic development of all the basin states. These advantages
included possible schemes for irrigation to realize agricultural growth; to start the
swamp reclamation to institute hydro-electric generation; to assist the development
of transportation, fisheries, recreation and to rationalize domestic and industrial
utilization. These possibilities were emphasized by the unprecedented overflow of
the lakes in the early 1960s, with consequent flooding and submersion of the
shorelands. For Lake Victoria, the annual level started rising in November 1961 and
reached its peak with a maximum rise of two and a half metres in May 1964. The
problem was to establish the course of this development. Lack of adequate data
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appeared to be a stumbling block for any analysis. This necessitated a hydrological
survey of the Lake Victoria catchment and surrounding source areas of the waters of
the Nile. Later, this led to the establishment of the Hydro-meteorological Project.
The long-term objective of the Hydromet was to develop and conserve the Nile
Basin water resources. The short-term objectives were the establishment of a hydro-
meteorological network for data collection and the development of a mathematical
model to study the water balance of the upper Nile Basin. The Hydromet Programme
was a broad-based effort to collect and analyze data on hydro-meteorological aspects
of the upper White Nile drainage system. The original plan of operation was signed
by the founding members; i.e. Egypt, Kenya, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda in May
1967 and stated119:
"The objectives of the project are the collection and analysis of hydrological data of
the catchments of Lakes Victoria, Kyoga and Albert in order to study the water
balance of the upper Nile. The data collected and the study are expected to assist the
countries in the planning of water conservation and development and to provide the
groundwork for inter-governmental cooperation in the storage, regulation and use of
the Nile."
The organization facilitated the data collection of the equatorial lakes. The objectives
of the Hydromet failed to include the main players in the Nile Basin. For instance,
Ethiopia could only join the Hydromet as an observer in 1971. In 1972 Burundi,
Rwanda and Zaïre (the DRC) joined the programme as full members. The Hydromet
was financed by the United Nations Development Programme for the first two
phases until 1982 and later used their own resources until 1992. Most of the projects
proposed by the Hydromet grouping were not realized.
Considering the financial constraints it faced and the changing political climate in
the region, Hydromet's achievements were indeed considerable. In addition, the
Hydromet Programme was the first post-colonial regional forum for international
cooperation in the Nile Basin; and its experiences are valuable for current efforts to
promote sustainable development.
The UNDUGU Group (Brotherhood in Swahili) was formed in 1983 through the
initiative of Egypt with the aim of protecting its permanent interest in the Nile Basin.
The UNDUGU was an extension of the permanent Joint Technical Commission
created by the 1959 agreement. This group consisted of Egypt, The Central African
Republic, Sudan, Uganda and Zaïre (the DRC); Burundi and Rwanda joined later,
and subsequently Kenya, Tanzania and Ethiopia began to attend the UNDUGU
meetings as observers. The aim was to form a Nile Basin Economic Community.
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Among other objectives, a possible power grid connection between the Inga Power
Station in the DRC and the Aswan has been envisaged by UNDUGU.
At the request of Egypt and UNDUGU, the UNDP carried out a feasibility study to
determine cooperation among these countries. Their first priority was for
infrastructural development and the enhancement of commercial, exchanges. A draft
memorandum aimed at firming up the legal basis for cooperation among the
UNDUGU Group countries was prepared but not signed. The Technical Committee
which was set up to examine the report, presented a draft memorandum containing a
framework for cooperation (not including water and energy) to the 10th Ministerial
Group in 1993. The main objectives of the UNDUGU grouping had been to forge
cooperation in areas of infrastructure, environmental cooperation, culture and trade.
The grouping was disbanded without achieving its aim. In conclusion, this group
could not overcome the economical and political problems it encountered and is no
longer active. The UNDUGU grouping was later succeeded by the forming of three
more organizations: The Nile Basin Integrated Development (1988), the Technical
Cooperation Commission for the Promotion and Development of the Nile
(TECCONILE)(1992) and the Nile Basin Cooperative Framework.
At sub-basin level the Kagera River Basin Organization (KBO) was set up in August
1977 between three of the four basin states of the Kagera River, namely Rwanda,
Burundi and Tanzania. The fourth state, Uganda, acceded to it later. A survey and a
basin plan was carried out between 1971 and 1976 with the UNDP financing the
studies for a major hydro-electric project at the Rusomo Falls with an installed
capacity of 615 MW. This project was finalized through the Belgian Government's
financial assistance. The KBO had to deal with virtually all the activities carried out
in the Kagera River Basin.
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These activities included: Water and hydro-power resources development; the
furnishing of water and water related services for mining and industrial operations;
the supply of drinking water; agriculture and livestock development; forestry and
land reclamation; mineral exploration; disease and pest control; transport and
communications; trade, tourism, wildlife conservation, fisheries and aquatic
development; industrial development and the protection of the environment. The
Kagera Basin Project, which was initiated in 1970, comprised two phases:
Long-term objectives
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To assist participating countries in the development, conservation, and use
of the Nile Basin water resources in an integrated and sustainable manner
through basin-wide cooperation for the benefit of all, and
To assist participating countries in the determination of the equitable
entitlement of each riparian country to the use of the Nile waters.
Short-term objectives
To assist participating member states in developing natural water
resource master plans and in integrating them into a Nile Basin
Development Action Plan, and
To assist participating member states in developing the infrastructural
capacity, and techniques required for the management of Nile Basin water
resources.
Egypt, Rwanda, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda and the DRC became members of the
TECCONILE, whilst Burundi, Ethiopia and Kenya maintained their observer status.
Eritrea joined the observer group after it gained its independence from Ethiopia.
Despite previous problems, the Nile riparian countries have now embarked on a new
spirit of cooperation, with clear departure from confrontational past to a cooperative
future. This spirit was triggered for the first time in the history of the Nile by an
Agreed Minutes signed between nine of the riparian states, in September 1998 in
Arusha, Tanzania. The countries of the basin were embarking on cooperation "without
prejudice to all the rights and obligations each riparian state has under international
law to the equitable use of the waters of the Nile." The cooperation between the upper
and lower riparians to share water resources equitably may finally lead to the
avoidance of conflict and even to the intergration of basin countries. The cooperation
in water resources will also favourably impact on other economic and political areas.
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Population growth increases the demand for more water for agriculture and industry. Many
countries fall in the category of "water source" nations. It is projected that in Africa alone
300 million people (a third of the continent's population), will be forced to live with water
scarcity by the year 2000. Nine of the fourteen countries that constitute the Middle East
already face the problem of water scarcity. This problem also applies to the Nile riparian
countries because all of them have an increased population growth (plus /minus 3% per
annum). This could make water a scarce commodity. The dimension of economics in the
Nile is much more complex than in any other river basin in the world.
The two downstream riparians are better off both in irrigation and hydro-electric power
generation. The downstream countries are not only dependent on waters received from
outside their territorial jurisdiction but are also the sole beneficiaries of salt and alluvial soils
122 Tvedt, T.: The Management of Water and Irrigation: The Blue Nile
106
washed down from the hilly terrains of the upstream countries, especially from the
Ethiopian plateau.
107
Table 8 - Cropland and Irrigation
Cropland total area Irrigated land as % Irrigated land as %
Country
(in hectares) of cropland of cropland
Burundi 1,332,000 4 5
Egypt 2,560,000 100 100
Ethiopia 13,930,000 1 1
Kenya 2,420,000 2 2
Rwanda 1,120,000 0 0
Sudan 12,478,000 14 15
Tanzania 5,230,000 1 3
Uganda 6,705,000 0 0
DRC - - -
Eritrea* - - -
Source: Tvedt, Terje.: The Management of Water and Irrigation: The Blue Nile, (eds)
Doornbos, M. et al, Beyond Conflict in the Horn , James Currey, London, 1992 p. 84 .
World Bank Report, 1995.
* Separate figures for Eritrea were not available
Table 9 - Hydro-electric Power Resources
Technical Potential Installed Capacity
(in Megawatts) (in Megawatts)
Country
MW MW
Egypt 3210 2700
Burundi 289 12
Ethiopia 4000 230
Kenya 814 354
Rwanda 600 56
Sudan 380 225
Tanzania 4000 259
Uganda 1200 156
DRC 1200 156
Eritrea* - -
108
Source: Tvedt, Terje.: Ibid p. 85
* Separate figures for Eritrea are not available.
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Table 10 - Present and future consumption by country and water use
Present Consumption Future Consumption
Country (BCM/YR) (BCM/YR)
NB - These figures are the estimated future consumptions in the Nile Basin by the year
2020. Another estimate of water demand in Ethiopia for the year 2000 is 0.64 BCM, 0.17
BCM and 3.41 BCM, for domestic, industrial and agricultural uses, respectively (Review of
water resources issues in Sub-Saharan Africa, ILRI, 1993).
The economic realities show how the riparian countries of the Nile's entanglement escalated
as the demand for water resources increased to satisfy the economic needs of the growing
population. The fresh water resources are limited, and statistics show that at present 1.5
billion people in eighty countries are short of fresh water. In twenty-nine countries, 450
million people have inadequate water supply for living. Estimation says that before the year
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2025, one billion people will be refugees for reasons of water shortage125 The Nile Basin
cannot be considered isolated from the rest of the world because the same consequences and
implications would also apply to the Nile Basin. All the riparian countries of the Nile must
deal with the problem of the conflicting trend of an increasing food demand and the
decreasing water availability for agriculture.
In terms of economic benefit, the lower and upper riparian countries could gain great
advantages from cooperation. Cooperation could be a force to foster peace, and to induce
old enemies to cooperate for the common good. Cooperative efforts finally could lead to:
Full-scale basin-wide economic integration.
Win-win formula with acceptable and workable mechanisms accommodating the
common economic interest and legitimate needs of each of the riparian states.
Export of hydro-electric power.
Increased food production for export as well as for self-sufficiency purposes.
Development of modern inter-state water and roadways.
Increased cross-border trading.
These are all examples of the value for cooperation in the Nile Basin, which will bring
favorable economic results to each individual country and to the basin as a whole.
In 1998, all the Nile riparian states (except Eritrea) joined in the dialogue. Together they
designed a transitional institutional mechanism that included all the Nile Basin countries as
equal members, to succeed the TECCONILE and function until a formal cooperative
framework could be implemented. This transitional mechanism was officially launched in
February 1999, and comprised a Council of Ministers of Water Affairs of the Nile Basin
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(Nile-Com), a Technical Advisory Committee (Nile-Tac), and a Secretariat (Nile-Sec)
located in Entebbe, Uganda. The overall process was officially named the Nile Basin
Initiative (NBI). (See Annex B for the NBI Structure).
The NBI is a transitional regional partnership that united the ten countries of the Nile Basin.
The Nile Council of Ministers, which comprised the Minister of Water Affairs from each
riparian state, constituted the highest body of the NBI. The daily work included the
preparation of project documents and was undertaken by the Nile Secretariat and assisted by
the Nile team. The Nile Technical Advisory Committee (Nile-Tac)was a composition of
legal and water experts. Nile-Tac was divided into two working groups to evaluate the
preparation work and give their approval at key points during the process. These working
groups met for the first time at the NBI Secretariat Offices in Entebbe, Uganda, at the end of
August 1999. They met again in Entebbe during the first half of December 1999 and in
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, early in July 2000 following the 8th Nile 2002 Conference.
The initiative was guided by a shared vision "to achieve the sustainable socio-economic
development through the equitable utilization of, and benefit from, the common Nile Basin
water resources". To achieve the shared vision, the riparian countries developed a strategic
action programme that focused on the two complementary ideas: a shared vision and action
on the ground. These ideas were mutually reinforcing a common vision providing a
framework for practical activities, which, would make the vision a realty. These ideas would
be translated into action through two complimentary sub-programmes:
Subsidiary action programmes, which would plan and implement action in the
field at the lowest appropriate level, taking into account benefits and externalities
of planned activities in other countries.
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The envisaged cooperative framework charted a parallel approach towards the development
of the Nile. The task of the first project, under the shared vision, will be the creation of an
enabling environment for investment and action on the ground, within a basin- wide
framework. It comprise five broad themes:
Cooperative Framework (Project D3, ongoing)
Confidence building and stockholder involvement
Socio-economic, environmental and sectorial analysis
Development and investment planning
Applied training.
The primary purpose of the Shared Vision Programme (SVP) is the creation of an
environment for investments and implementation of the programmes within a basin-wide
framework. The programme, as originally conceived, comprised five broad theme areas.
The shared vision is underpinned by a cooperative framework. Supporting this "roof" are
four major basin-wide theme areas that are the pillars of the basin-wide Shared Vision
Programme. Other activities will be added as they are needed and agreed upon. All activities
within these tasks have a major capacity-building component and contribute to human
resources development within the basin by, providing the "foundation" of the proposed
programme. The programme is intended to promote the shared vision through a limited but
effective set of basin-wide activities and projects. Based on the work of seven working
groups, a portfolio of seven priority projects was prepared through a unique multi-country,
multi-sectoral, participatory process.
The portfolio included four sectoral projects: environmental management, power trade,
efficient use of water for agriculture and water resources planning and management. Three
cross-cutting projects related to confidence building, stakeholder involvement, benefit
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sharing and integration and applied training. The most important of the five themes of the
shared vision was the first one - the Cooperative Framework D3, which was an ongoing
programme sponsored by the UNDP where three experts from each riparian country were
delegated to compile the general principles governing relations between all the riparian
countries on the use of the Nile waters. Most importantly, the experts had to adopt basic
principles concerning the Nile, similar to those already in place and applicable in other
basins. This would enable the riparian states to share and allocate the waters of their shared
resource.
The committee of experts, deliberated on the principles of the framework agreement on the
basis of the non-negotiable uses of international watercourses. For the last three years they
could not come up with an agreed framework and have decided to submit their report to the
Nile-Com for further instruction. The SVP is a broad-based programme for collaborative
action, exchange of experience and capacity building. Countries of the Nile Basin
recognized, in 1998, that cooperative development held the greatest prospect of bringing
benefits to the whole region. Out of this recognition they joined in a dialogue to create a
partnership to facilitate the common pursuit of sustainable development and management of
the Nile waters.
The strategic action programme of the NBI is an umbrella that included two sub-
programmes whose aim was to promote the shared vision. This shared vision would be
targeted to alleviate poverty by creating benefits for all the people in the Nile region. The
umbrella consisted of the Shared Vision Programme (SVP) and the Subsidiary Action Plan
(SAP). Implementation of the SVP was expected to cost US$ 122 million, while the cost for
feasibility studies and detailed designs of investment programmes (through the SAP) was
estimated at US$ 79 million. Funding for NBI facilitation, programme management and
oversight, as well as dialogue, would cost an estimated US$ 10 million. In all, it will cost
about US$ 211 million to support the strategic programme of the NBI.126
126 http://www.lho.nl/news
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An appeal was made for international funding and was launched in Geneva, in June 2001,
during the Conference of the International Consortium for Cooperation in the Nile
(ICCON)127 between the ten riparian countries, donors and financial institutions. At the end
of the meeting this forum pledged US$ 140 million. This was a remarkable achievement in
the history of Nile Basin cooperation. This gathering was a very important platform. It was
the first of its kind to fight poverty and to promote sustainable exploitation of the river Nile
for the benefit of all countries in the region. The donor support showed a general optimism
regarding international support for the projects.
The second track, which is the Subsidiary Action Programme (SAP), would comprise the
actual development projects at sub-basin level involving two or more countries. This would
allow the move from planning to action. In order to implement the SAP, Nile countries were
expected to participate on the basis of the sub-basin they share in common. As a result, the
countries of the Nile are sub-divided into the Eastern Nile consisting of Ethiopia, Eritrea,
Egypt and Sudan, and the Southern Nile, with Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, Kenya, Uganda,
the DRC, Sudan and Egypt. At sub-basin level the countries identified would have joint and
mutually beneficial investment opportunities in the form of a Subsidiary Action Plans
(SAP'). Working jointly within their respective groups, countries of the NBI have come up
with projects that will yield investment opportunities for mutual and equal benefit.
The Eastern Nile Subsidiary Action Programme (ENSAP) seeks to initiate a regional
integrated, multi-purpose programme through an initial set of investments. Within the
regional context, the ENSAP states have identified seven sub-projects. These projects are in
the areas of integrated water resources management, flood management, power generation,
inter-connecting irrigation and drainage and watershed management. The irrigation projects
127This is a forum for dialogue on the options and opportunities for the development and
management of the Nile Basin.
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intended for Ethiopia included those to be constructed around Lake Tana (which has the
capacity to irrigate 50,000 hectares), and another near Nekempte and Didesa, in western
Ethiopia. The latter plans to irrigate 80,000 hectares by using water from the Didesa River.
Ethiopia also intends to develop two hydro-power projects that would generate about 3,000
MW. They are planned for construction at Kara Dobi (Blue Nile) and Baro-Akobo-Birbir
rivers.
Another "fast track project" proposed by the three countries include the Eastern Nile
Simulation Project, for power generation between Ethiopia and Sudan and watershed
management in the Baro Akobo Basin. These irrigation and hydro-power projects are the
first of the 46 projects that Ethiopia has proposed under the ENSAP. Egypt and Sudan have
10 hydropower, irrigation and watershed management projects.
The Nile Equatorial Lakes Subsidiary Action Programme (NELSAP) also seeks to achieve
joint action on the ground to promote poverty alleviation, economic growth and the reversal
of environmental degradation in the sub-basin. The NELSAP countries have identified
twelve multi-country projects. These projects target investments in the agricultural and
fisheries development, water resources management, hydro-power development and high
tension transmission lines.
The two sub-basin expert groups are currently identifying cooperative projects for
implementation, by first assessing the upstream and downstream impacts, as the Subsidiary
Action Programme (SAP) is founded on the principle of equitable utilization, ensuring
benefits for all parties and distributing benefits, costs, and risks equitably. The following are
listed as potential SAP projects:
Water Resources Management Projects which included:- Water supply and sanitation;
irrigation and drainage development; fisheries development; hydro-power development and
pooling; watershed management; sustainable management of wetlands and bio-diversity
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conservation; the sustainable management of lakes and linked wetland systems; river
regulation; flood management; desertification control; water quality management and water
use efficiency improvements.
Health and environment, and other: Malaria and other endemic disease control, the
protection of wildlife, environmental management, disaster forecasting and management.
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In addition, for the first time in the history of the Nile Basin (during the recent Ministerial
level meeting in Khartoum in March 2001), consensus was reached among the Eastern Nile
Basin countries to execute joint and independent irrigation and hydro-electric power and
watershed management. The realization of these projects will serve as an initial test on
whether the visions of the countries for cooperation could become a reality.
Cooperation regarding the Nile has now reached a stage where the countries have started
facilitating conditions and paving the way for the establishment of visible legal and
institutional frameworks and entering into negotiations concerning the water sharing
entitlement criteria. Confidence building remains a major task of the Nile Basin countries to
achieve before any feasible cooperation in the equitable utilization of the waters of the Nile
can begin. It is already evident that countries in the sub-basin and those on basin level have
played collaborative roles during the past seven years. This serves as a promising testimony
towards the realization of the common goal of equitable water sharing for the gradual
eradication of poverty. The Nile countries have entered into a new chapter and will tackle
challenges for the future to improve the standard of living for their people through
collaboration rather than confrontation.
To achieve a viable development in the Nile Basin in all aspects, the cooperation of all
professionals, decision makers and political leaders of the basin states as well as external
support agencies is required. In this regard "The Nile 2002" series of conferences is one of
the latest ongoing attempts for greater understanding, which provides unofficial and
informal venues for the exchange of views and the fostering of cooperation for the
development of the basin. The Nile 2002 Conference is the first major initiative that started
in 1993 to facilitate cooperation in the use and management of the Nile waters. The first
Nile 2002 Conference was held in Aswan, Egypt(February 1993), followed by the second in
Khartoum, Sudan (January 1994), the third in Arusha, Tanzania (February 1995), the fourth
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in Kampala, Uganda (February 1996), the fifth in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (February 1997),
the sixth in Kigali, Rwanda (February 1998), the seventh in Cairo, Egypt (March 1999) and
the eighth conference was held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in 2000. The last conference will
take place in 2002.
The conferences culminate in 2002 and will adopt main strategies for resources and action
programmes for the riparian countries within the context of the integrated Nile Basin
development. For six consecutive conferences, Ethiopia only maintained am observer status
but started participating as a full member in the 1999 conference. The main objectives of the
2002 Nile Conference are the following:
To bring together experts from the Nile Basin, international experts and external
support agencies to address specific topics relating to the development of the
Nile Basin.
To discuss national water resources management strategies and action
programmes for the Nile Basin countries and their harmonization within the
context of integrated Nile Basin development.
To discuss options for a cooperative and institutional framework, and appropriate
instruments for the Nile Basin.
To provide policy directives and visions for policy makers.
The Nile 2002 Conference Series brought a new and congenial atmosphere in which the
Nile question would be discussed openly and be resolved for mutual satisfaction. The
dialogue forum was created to the delegates of all riparian states:
To air their views.
To present their cases.
To participate in the debates and suggest structures for cooperation for the peoples of
the Nile Basin in all development matters that could promote peace and understanding.
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The valuable ideas generated by the 2002 Conferences, will shed some light on the
important environmental and economic considerations that need to be addressed as a basin
wide approach. The ongoing dialogue in the 2002 Conferences is important considering the
suspicion and misunderstanding built up over the years between the upper- and lower-
riparian states.
In general, what has been achieved by the series of 2002 Conferences demonstrated a step
forward in fostering cooperation in countries of the Nile Basin. The dialogue forum will
serve as a significant force to shift the Basin from an era of confrontation to a new age of
cooperation.
In the past and currently, several international organizations, donor countries and agencies
have been involved in studies and development of the Nile Basin. The UNDP, the World
Bank, the African Development Bank, the European Union, USAID, CIDA and a few
countries have been involved in financing studies and development work in Egypt and
Sudan as well as in the upper riparian states. The United Nations, through its various
agencies and regional offices such as the ECA, UNEP, FAO, WMO, UNICEF, has also
implemented various programmes for several years in the countries of the Nile Basin.
During the Cold War the countries of the Nile Basin belonged to different camps, and civil
war and political instability in most of the basin states often changed the political agenda of
each state. For this reason, long-term basin wide cooperation was extremely difficult to
achieve.
This was also aggravated by unbalanced involvement of international agencies and donor
countries. They adversely affected bilateral as well as multilateral, relationship for example,
the former Soviet Union gave substantial financial assistance for the construction of the
Aswan High Dam. This has greatly increased the irrigation potential of Egypt and to a
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certain extent made it the beneficiary of an unjust status quo. The African Development
Bank, on the other hand, denied a loan to Ethiopia that was aimed at harnessing the Blue
Nile (Aleltu Hydro-electric Project) as Egypt managed to have the loan blocked, using its
economic and policital leverage.128 The lending policy of the World Bank calls for a "no
objection stance" by co-basin states for projects submitted to the bank through one of the
co-basin countries.
The operational directive of the bank requires the consent of all affected riparians before
releasing funds for water projects. The downstream countries were consulted for projects
undertaken in the upstream countries for a "no objection statement" while the upstream
countries were not consulted on projects undertaken in the downstream countries. For
example, the Ugandan Government was instructed by the World Bank to obtain a permit
from Egypt in order to secure a loan for the hydrological works in Lake Victoria.129 Egypt
alone (since the Camp David Accord) was fortunate enough to be the recipient of more than
US$ 60 billion from the United States, not to mention the US$ 3.5 billion it receives
annually from the same donor, while other riparian countries experience economic hardship.
The demise of the Cold War brought a change in the Nile Basin, and opened the way for
regional cooperation through the assistance and goodwill of international partners and
donors.
The NBI and the World Bank are working together to achieve basin-wide cooperation in the
21st century. The NBI countries are committed to give continued support for their share of
the program and the donor partners are committed to work with the Nile states to secure the
financing for the first phase, as well as for future phases of investment. The International
Consortium and Cooperation on the Nile (ICCON) established through the assistance of the
128 Tafesse, T.: Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley: Retrospect and prospect, Addis Ababa
University, 1997, p. 8
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World Bank plan to achieve a long-term partnership between the Nile states and the
international community. This unique forum will coordinate donor support for an action
plan and will convene a Consultative Group (CG) meeting. ICCON is seen as a partnership
between and among the Nile countries and the international community. ICCON seeks to
raise and coordinate funding from bilateral, multilateral, and private funding entities, in
support of cooperative water resources management and development and other related
projects in the Nile Basin.
ICCON held its first meeting in June 26-28 2001 in Geneva, Switzerland, by bringing
together the international donor community and NGO's in support of the NBI - a
cooperative programme to address poverty, environmental degradation and instability in the
the Nile Basin. The newly formed Consultative Group (CG) expressed their support for the
initial goals, and their committment to working with the Nile states in the future. The CG
also indicated their support to implement the full programme of the NBI presented to
ICCON. The programme included:-
Implementation of a basin- wide research programme.
Capacity building and technical assistance (the Shared Vision Programme).
Preparation for cooperative, socially and environmentally sustainable sub-basin
investment programmes in the Eastern Nile and the Equatorial Lakes region.
The first phase of this investment programme is anticipated to cost about US$ 3 billion. The
development partners pledged initial financial support of at least US$ 140 million to finance
the full programme. The donor partners are committed to work with the Nile states to secure
the financing for this phase, as well as for future phases. The successful launch of ICCON
constituted a new partnership for the Nile Basin states and the international community,
working together to improve the lives of the peoples of the Nile Basin. In matters of an
equitable utilization of the waters of the Nile the involvement of international agencies like
CIDA, the UNDP, the World Bank is essential. The function of other agencies such as
UNICEF, FAO, UNEP and the European Union is to cooperate and ensure food security in
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the region as a whole. The participation of the World Bank and its partners will facilitate
cooperation among the Nile states and encourage development of this vast and huge
resource for the benefit of 300 million people. Here we find the most impoverished people
and 5 of the 10 least developed countries in the world. In doing so, it is hoped that the
support of the international community will also play a positive role. The World Bank
should reconsider its lending policy by which lower riparian countries will not be allowed to
dictate terms by taking undue advantage of the "no objection clause" to veto or prevent the
implementation of projects on the upper reaches of the Nile, where poverty, malnutrition,
drought and famine are rampant.
The intervention of the World Bank along with the donor community can play a big role in
building confidence to bring about an atmosphere conducive to development and induce a
change in the unjust status quo, which prevails in the Nile currently. The support from the
international community and international financial institutions is crucial for any serious
strategy for poverty alleviation and education and for utilizing the foreign investments
where needed.
The Nile Basin countries are historically, politically and economically interdependent and
bound by the Nile River umbilical cord. But lack of genuine cooperation that has so far
characterized the Nile serves no purpose other than deepening differences among the
riparians and aggravating the state of poverty in the basin. The most fundamental solution to
the problems concerning the utilization of the waters of the Nile is regional or basin-wide
cooperation in water development. Water can both be a source of cooperation or conflict:
water is so vital in this volatile troubled region that it could be a force for encouraging peace
and for inducing old enemies to cooperate for the common good. History and current
events show that so far it proved to be a disruptive influence and a course for conflict. It is
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regrettable that the Nile has been the source of conflict mainly between Egypt and Ethiopia.
It is clear that both countries stand to gain from cooperation. Egypt in particular has more to
gain than any other co-riparian from increased cooperation.
"The attempt by Egypt to maintain the status quo (leaning) on historical rights will be
untenable morally, ethically and politically for it would be tantamount to depriving others of
life while caring for their own."130
"... water management in the highly water dependent Nile Basin is a complex and multi-
faceted challenge, a broad and integrated approach should be taken."
It is very difficult to come out with a clear solution that would satisfy every Nile Basin state.
Some suggestions could forge a win-win formula to break the stalemate and pave the way
towards settling the current problems:
Egypt and Sudan should erase the 1959 agreement, which was a bilateral deal
that ignored the natural rights of all the other riparian states. It should be revised
and re-negotiated to accommodate the interests of all the co-basin countries.
Establish water allocation mechanisms agreed on by all the basin states based on
an equitable formula.
Increase joint water saving technologies such as drip irrigation which gives only
as much water as crops need and deliver it directly to their roots (so-called 'green
130 Abraham, K.: "The Nile Issue: psycho-political hurdles to an angreement and the way forward towards
rapprochement, " EIIPD Journal , series No. 14, Addis Ababa.
131 Abate, Z.: The integrated development of Nile Basin waters. center of Near Middle Eastern
Studies, SOAS, University of London. 1990.
124
water'). It is a more efficient use and reduces the release of water at Aswan for
navigational purposes. This could also save much needed water in the Nile
Basin.
Cooperative water development efforts would lead to increased usable water supplies for
everyone, as well as other benefits like hydro-power generation. Cooperation on projects
would lead to job creation and prosperity in areas, which are unlikely to have any other
chance of development. The increasing population puts great pressure on water resources
because of the need for more water for irrigation agriculture to increase the food production
and for sanitary and industrial use. On the other hand, shared water resources are dwindling
in many places in the world. The result could be a water war. However, cooperation
between upper and lower riparians to share water resources equitably may avoid conflict
and even lead to integration of basin countries in their cooperation on the water resource
allocation. The allocation policy should establish the minimum acceptable flow from each
basin. The advantage of which is that it can be used flexibly to set seasonal standards for
natural and local anomalies and river quality in fluctuating demands.132
The Nile is no exception to other international rivers which have managed to find an
amicable breakthrough and reached a winning formula for the reasonable and equitable
utilization of their water resources. The sustainability of the river as well as the prosperity
of the people of the basin is best served through a suitable arrangement for common
benefit. The riparian countries of the Nile should foster a spirit of inter-dependency
because their future development is inextricable linked to the hydrological cycle of the
river. Reaching an amicable settlement in negotiations regarding an international river may
certainly prove frustrating and, at times, cause seemingly insurmountable problems to the
concerned parties. To rectify this situation, the intervention of neutral third parties as
facilitators may play a significant role in easing the problems . In this regard, the role of the
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World Bank in negotiating the 1960 water treaty between India and Pakistan is worth
mentioning.
Other areas where third parties can make a difference is in participation in capacity building
programmes in the riparian countries of the Nile . It is worth noting here that water in its
elemental state affords limitless opportunities for distribution of benefits among the
countries served by the river. As already indicated, water has in a multiplicity of natural
uses. Depending on the geographical location, and hydrographic, hydrological, climatic,
ecological and other natural factors, water can be used in a variety of ways in different
circumstances. Inter-state cooperation guided by a win-win formula could ensure equitable
benefits to each country, depending on its relative location and natural advantage.
CHAPTER V
The current level of cooperation and positive developments in the Nile Basin are
remarkable. The Nile riparian countries are expected to moving in the right direction by
setting aside their differences and share the water resources to make social and economic
progress a reality. For centuries, the lower riparians have exploited the Nile River to the
detriment of others. If this continues unabated, the hand-to-mouth existence of millions of
people would further deteriorate; and this in turn heightens the tension between the riparian
states. Egypt is slow to change this state of affairs. Though, it would be in Egypts' best
interest to agree on equitable utilization of the Nile waters by cooperating with other
countries to the implementation of different projects at sub-basin level.
126
As long as population continues to grow in any region, the issue of water and other natural
resources will play an important role in regional politics. The Sudanese civil war, for
example, is getting a new dimension by intertwining with the natural resources. Apart from
religious element, its abundant and untapped oil resources became one of the main reasons
of the conflict which is one of the longest civil wars in Africa.
One of the major challenges facing the Nile Countries is the fact that there is more demand
than supply of water. In this regard, all Nile Basin Countries would benefit from working
together to reduce evaporative losses on a basin wide scale. In this respect, The NBI is a
landmark as it initiated constructive dialogue among historical adversaries.
Of course, Egypt wants to be regional power house as there is a rising influence from South
Africa after the end of Apartheid.133 However, the unprecedented move of some upstream
countries to abrogate the 1929 treaty between Egypt and Britain could have substantial
pressure on Egypt to revise the treaty and strike a deal with them on how to use the Nile
waters equitably. It has been pointed out that cooperation between upstream and
downstream countries in the Nile Basin brings common benefit as it could result in more
efficient use of the waters.
One of the premises for possible future cooperation is the necessity to develop major sub-
basin projects such as: building power stations on the Nile tributaries and dam at Lake Tana
in Ethiopia as sharing water in a high and cool area is much more efficient and reasonable
than sharing water in such a hot and dry area like Lake Nasser which was created by the
Aswan High Dam.134 According to an estimation, however, the water available at Lake
Nasser could increase to 15 billion cubic meters per year by preventing evaporation and
seepage.
133 http://www.ethiopianreporter.com
134 Tafesse, T.: Hydropolitics of the Nile Valley: Retrospect and prospect. Addis Ababa University. 1997 p.8
127
This thesis has attempted to review the enormous potential of the Nile Basin by refering and
analyzing technical data and doing an in-depth study of the hydro-political situation as well
as the historical and legal backgrounds of the current problem. Therefore, for a lasting
solution to the Nile problem, I would like to put forward the following recommendations for
consideration:
Priority should be given to avoid mutual suspicion and build confidence among
riparians.
The current process which is on the right track to bring all-inclusive cooperation
in the Nile Basin should continue.
A legal regime stipulating the need and determine the rights of each individual
riparian country (based on equitable allocation of Nile water resources) should be
agreed upon and strengthened.
A sub-basin approach should be adopted to help materialize a firm foundation for
future basin wide cooperation with institutional framework.
Sustainable peace and prosperity in the Nile Basin can be achieved through
engagement in constructive diplomacy and transparency.
The international community has to play an important role in all aspects of the
Nile Basins development process.
Countries in the basin seem to be realized that equitable utilization of the Nile waters would
lead to the creation of long lasting peace, security and cooperation in the region. It would
also ensure sustainable development as well as safeguard and promote the interests and
economic rights of the peoples of the Basin. All the riparian states can only win the future
challenges and improve the standard of living of their peoples through cooperation rather
than confrontation.
128
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