Title: Nile River Basin Case Study
1Nile River Basin Case Study
- Elaine B. Darby
- CE 397 Fall 2005
2The Basin
Nile
Sudd Swamp
Blue Nile
White Nile
3Basin Population
- Ten Riparian States
- Egypt
- Sudan
- Ethiopia
- Uganda
- Rwanda
- Tanzania
- Kenya
- D.R. Congo
- Eritrea
- Burundi
4Issues in the Nile Basin
- Ethiopia
- Generates 85 water reaching Egypts Aswah Dam
- Second most populated riparian state
- The Single most important strategic interest is
striving to attain food security in a chronically
famine-prone regionand all scenarios involve
more intense use of the western Nile watershed
Waterbury
- Egypt
- 96 of population live in Nile Delta/Basin
- Entirely dependent on Nile waters Only 4 from
underground reserves - Considered the most powerful riparian state in
basin
- Sudan
- 60 of Land Mass in Basin
- Sudd Swamp Evap loss of 50 of all Water in
White Nile - Civil war
- Historically always sided with Egypt in Nile
Issues
5Unique Issues to Nile Basin
- Historic precedence
- Colonial and Egyptian control
- Egypt and Northern Sudan do not contribute to
water generation in the Nile - Majority of the riparian states became
independent nations since the 1960s - Political and economic basis weak
6International Agreements
- 1899 Anglo-Egyptian
- No water withdrawn upstream of Egypt without
Egyptian and British consent - 1929 Egyptian and British Agreement
- British represented Kenya, Tanzania and Sudan
- 93 water of Nile allocated to Egypt, 7 to Sudan
- All upstream projects approved by Egypt
- 1959 Egypt and Sudan
- 75 to Egypt, 25 to Sudan
- Rejected by all of the other riparian states when
they became independent
7Water Allocation in the Basin
8Riparian States Interests
- Status Quo
- Egypt
- Uganda
- New Allocations
- Ethiopia
- Sudan
- Eritrea
- Indifferent
- Kenya, Tanzania, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi
9Current Situations
- The ultimate nightmare for Egypt would be for
Ethiopia and the Sudan to overcome their domestic
obstacles to development and to examine their
shared interests in joint development of the
watershedgiven Ethiopian and Sudanese regional
behavior in the 1990s, Egypt need not lose
sleep. Waterbury, 2002, The Nile Basin
10How do you allocate the water in the Nile?
11Beaumonts Proposal50/50 Historical/Generation
Proposed Allocation
12Equitable and Reasonable
- Beaumont (1997) 50 generation/50 historical
usage
13Brichier-Colomba (1996) 33 weight to each
factor
Population of Riparians country in
BasinRiparian's Area of BasinAverage amount
of water used
14Brichier-Colomba (1996)33 weight to each factor
15What factors do you think should considered for
allocations in the Nile Basin?
16Waterburys CriteriaEqual Weighting for each
factor
- The proportion of water flowing across a
riparian's border to the total discharge of the
water course - The proportion of the ripairan's total population
living in the basin - The total amount of irrigable land that could be
farmed with watercourse water without extra-basin
transfers - The amount of alternative, utilizable water
available in aquifers, regionally appropriate
rainfall and stored water (deductions) - A basin needs per cap allocation to protect life
and basic health - An allocation necessary to protect existing
wetland and nature's "use rights"
17Whats Happening in the Basin?
18Recent History of Cooperation
- 1992 Council of Ministers of Water Affairs
(Nile-COM) all ten riparian states represented - 1995 Nile River Basin Action Plan develop a
co-operative framework for management of the Nile
endorsed by all
19Nile Basin Initiative
- Goal To achieve sustainable socioeconomic
development through the equitable utilization of,
and benefit from the common resources - Objectives
- Develop water resources in a sustainable and
equitable way to ensure prosperity, security and
peace for all its people - To ensure efficient water management and optimal
use - To ensure cooperation and joint action between
states - To target poverty eradication and promote
economic integration - To ensure the program results in a move from
planning to action
20Recent Cooperation cont
- 1997 World Bank agrees to play a lead role in
coordinating external finances - 1997 Egypt announces (unilaterally) New Nile
Valley Development - 1998 Shared Vision Plan of NBI developed
- 1999 Approved list of priority projects/Nile
Basin Initiative formally established (legal
status for NBI)
21New Valley South Egypt Development Plan
- 1997 New Valley Plan Announced
- Add approx. 49 million acres of irrigated lands
- New Canal to provide water from the Nile
- Strongly opposed by Ethiopian government
22Recent Developments, cont.
- 2001 Sub-Basin agreements between Egypt, Sudan
and Ethiopia - Agreement to build dams and expand irrigation
within Ethiopia with the plan to sell power to
Sudan and Egypt - Sept. 28, 2005 Largest ever dam to be built in
Ethiopia at Kara Dobe on the Awash River with
Sudan and Egypt providing financial support
23Nile Basin Initiatives
- 2001 Shared Vision Plans formulated
- 2002 2005 Goals and Funding plans approved
- 2005 Applied Training Programs begin
24Shared Vision Project Portfolio
- Applied Training
- Nile Transboundary Environmental Action
- Nile Basin Regional Power Trade
- Water for Agriculture
- Water Resources Planning and Management
- Confidence-Building and Stakeholder Involvement
- Socio-economic Development and Benefit Sharing
25Questions for Discussion
- Peter Beaumont, proposes a water allocation
scheme to fit the equitable and reasonable call
in the 1997 UN Convention on a 50 generation/50
historical split. Do you feel this is applicable
to the Nile River Basin? (Reference pages 486
488 and pages 491 494). - In contrast to the Egyptians Century Storage
Scheme of 1946 the Nile Basin Initiative did not
start with specific water projects, but rather
education, development of skilled personnel and
inclusiveness of all stakeholders. Will this
work? What do you think will be the primary
factors in achieving development in a reasonable
time frame? Or is the lack of specific projects
in the NBI causing individual countries to move
forward with building projects?