The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam: The Road to the Declaration of Principles and the Khartoum Document
Publisher: Water International
Author(s): Salman M.A. Salman
Date: 2016
Topics: Conflict Prevention, Dispute Resolution/Mediation, Renewable Resources
Countries: Egypt, Ethiopia, Sudan
The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which Ethiopia started constructing in 2011, presented major challenges to the notion of existing rights and uses of the Nile waters asserted by Egypt and Sudan. Through an incremental approach based on gaining time, Ethiopia succeeded in making the GERD a reality, bolstered four years later, in 2015, by the signature by the three countries of two instruments: the Declaration of Principles and the Khartoum Document. The article traces and follows the developments regarding the GERD since 2011, and the escalation of the dispute thereon with Egypt and Sudan, discusses the two instruments, and analyzes the new legal order emanating therefrom. It concludes with an examination of the opportunities forgone as a result of the riparians’ unilateral development plans, and those to be gained through cooperation.