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Ethiopia Inaugurates Africa’s 3rd-Largest Dam, Threatens Locals, Neighbors, Environment

Ethiopia Inaugurates Africa’s 3rd-Largest Dam, Threatens Locals, Neighbors, Environment

Ethiopia’s Gibe III dam, which has been generating electricity for a year, was officially inaugurated Friday.

An even bigger and more controversial Ethiopian dam, Africa’s largest ever, is scheduled for completion in 2017.  The Grand Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile is expected to produce 6,000 megawatts of electricity – – the equivalent of six nuclear reactors.

From News 24. Story by AFP.

Ethiopia on Saturday inaugurated a hydroelectric dam that aims to double the country’s electricity output, but which critics say is a threat to locals and a UNESCO-listed lake in Kenya.

The Gibe III dam, which reaches 243 meters (797 feet) in height, is the third-largest dam in Africa and the biggest in a series built along the Omo River.

When it comes fully online, the Gibe III is expected to produce 1,870 megawatts of power, enough to sell energy abroad including to neighboring Kenya.

But environmentalists and rights groups warn the project will dramatically decrease water levels downstream all the way to Kenya’s Lake Turkana, which derives 80 percent of its resources from the river.

The lives of hundreds of thousands of people who make their living in the Omo River valley and on Turkana, both UNESCO World Heritage sites, would be affected, they say.

UNESCO and Human Rights Watch have accused the Ethiopian government of pushing people from the Omo Valley to free up land for state sugar cane plantations.

Gibe III, located about 350 kilometers (217 miles) southwest of Addis Ababa, took nine years to build and cost $1.6 billion, with 60 percent of financing coming from the Chinese export credit agency China Exim Bank.

With no natural gas or oil reserves of its own, Ethiopia is banking on renewable energy to help foster energy independence and economic growth.

Its Grand Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile, which is slated to be Africa’s largest-ever dam, is expected to produce 6,000 megawatts – tantamount to six nuclear reactors – when it is completed in 2017.

The Blue and the White Nile rivers converge in Khartoum, Sudan, and run north into Egypt as the Nile.

The project has poisoned relations with Egypt, which is almost totally reliant on the Nile for agriculture and drinking water, and fears the dam will hit its supplies.

Read more at News 24.