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Tuesday, March 7, 2017

The Struggle for Water on the River Nile

 The largest hydroelectric project in Africa has so far produced only discord.WHEN Egyptian politicians discussed sabotaging the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam in 2013, they naturally assumed it was a private meeting. But amid all the scheming, and with a big chuckle, Muhammad Morsi, then president, informed his colleagues that their discussion was being broadcast live on a state-owned television channel.

Embarrassment apart, it was already no secret that Egypt wanted to stop the largest hydroelectric project in Africa. When Ethiopia completes the construction of the dam in 2017, it will stand 170 metres tall (550 feet) and 1.8km (1.1 miles) wide. Its reservoir will be able to hold more than the volume of the entire Blue Nile, the tributary on which it sits (see map). And it will produce 6,000 megawatts of electricity, more than double Ethiopia’s current measly output, which leaves three out of four people in the dark.


WHEN Egyptian politicias discussd sabotagig the Grand Ethiopian Renaissa-nce Dam in 2013, they naturally assumed it was a private meeting. But amid all the scheming, and with a big chuckle, Muhammad Morsi, then president, informed his colleagues that their discussion was being broadcast live on a state-owned television channel.

Out of the Mainstream: Water Rights, Politics and Identity
++Even Ethiopia Blocked All the Nile, Egypt Still have the underground water reservoirs and aquifers besides the Mediterranean Sea and Red Sea after treatment to grow corps like in this plate

FISH FILLET, 
RICE CABBAGE 
SOUP

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