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Africa’s Largest Hydroelectric Dam Inaugurated in Ethiopia

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Africa’s Largest Hydroelectric Dam inaugurated in Ethiopia
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Africa’s Largest Hydroelectric Dam Inaugurated in Ethiopia, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), the continent’s largest hydroelectric project, in a historic ceremony hailed by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed as “a great achievement for all black people.”

The multibillion-dollar project, perched on the Blue Nile near Ethiopia’s border with Sudan, marks a monumental milestone in the country’s bid for energy independence and regional influence, even as tensions with Egypt remain unresolved.

Constructed by Italian engineering firm Webuild, the $4 billion dam now towers at 170 metres (550 feet) and spans nearly two kilometres (1.2 miles) across the river. Designed to hold a staggering 74 billion cubic metres of water, GERD boasts a generation capacity of 5,150 megawatts more than doubling Ethiopia’s current national electricity output.

“A Symbol of African Pride”

During the inaugural address, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed described the GERD as a beacon of African progress and resilience:

“This is not just Ethiopia’s dam. It is a symbol of what Africans can achieve without external aid. It is a great achievement for all black people around the world.”

The dam has long been positioned by the Ethiopian government as a cornerstone of its development agenda, promising to power millions of homes, expand industrialisation, and export surplus electricity to neighbouring nations.

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Egypt Still on Edge

Despite the triumphant celebrations in Addis Ababa, diplomatic tensions continue to simmer with downstream nations, particularly Egypt, which relies on the Nile for 97% of its freshwater needs.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has repeatedly voiced grave concerns, labelling GERD an “existential threat” to Egypt’s national water security. Cairo insists that Ethiopia must reach a binding agreement on water usage and dam operations to ensure fair access for all Nile Basin countries.

Ethiopia Inaugurates Africa’s Largest Hydroelectric Dam

Africa’s Largest Hydroelectric Dam

“We will never allow any threat to our water security. We will take all necessary measures within international law,” President Sisi warned during a recent address.

Negotiations between Ethiopia, Egypt, and Sudan have spanned over a decade, with multiple rounds of African Union and U.S.-backed talks failing to produce a lasting agreement.

A Continental Power Shift

With GERD now online, Ethiopia steps into a new era of potential energy exports and geopolitical leverage, although observers warn that unresolved disputes could trigger regional instability if not carefully managed.

International analysts see the dam’s completion as a defining moment in Africa’s infrastructure narrative one that underscores both the promise of self-financed megaprojects and the delicate diplomacy needed when shared resources cross borders.

As the turbines begin to turn and the reservoir gradually fills, all eyes remain on the Nile the lifeblood of multiple nations and now the stage for one of Africa’s most ambitious engineering feats.

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