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U.S. Urges Ethiopia to Reach Deal With Neighbors on Nile Dam

U.S. Cautions Ethiopia to Reach Deal With Neighbors on Nile Dam

(Bloomberg) --

Egypt, Ethiopia and mutual neighbor Sudan should conclude an agreement before the completion of Ethiopia’s disputed Nile dam, to prevent “significant harm to downstream countries,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said.

“Final testing and filling should not take place without an agreement,” Mnuchin said in a statement on the Treasury Department’s website following the latest Washington meeting between the parties on Feb. 27 and 28, which Ethiopia skipped. International safety standards should be assured before filling begins, he said.

Egypt and Ethiopia, which both have populations of about 100 million and are the fastest-growing economies in their respective regions, have said the future of the Nile is a matter of national security. The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam sits on the Blue Nile, the main tributary of the world’s longest river, and will generate about 6,000 megawatts once completed. The foreign-exchange-starved horn-of-Africa nation plans to export electricity to neighboring states.

Mnuchin intervened late last year to convene talks after Egypt said there was a deadlock in earlier negotiations, something Ethiopia disputes. The World Bank also joined the meetings, which initially had a Jan. 15 deadline for a solution. Further talks in January and February have failed to break the deadlock.

Ethiopia’s government said it was “disappointed” by Mnuchin’s statement, as it had notified Egypt, Sudan and the U.S. that it needed more time “to deliberate” on the process. It had addressed all relevant safety issues, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and of Water, Irrigation and Energy said in an e-mailed statement.

“Ethiopia as the owner of the GERD will commence first filling of the GERD in parallel with the construction of the dam, in accordance with the principles of equitable and reasonable utilization and the causing of no significant harm,” the Ministries said in the statement.

To contact the reporter on this story: Samuel Gebre in Addis Ababa at sgebre@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Gordon Bell at gbell16@bloomberg.net, Robert Brand, Tony Halpin

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