- Stock markets drift lower as US jobs data looms
- Pakistan flight departs for Paris after EU ban lifted
- Nobel laureate Malala Yousafzai to visit native Pakistan for girls' summit
- AI comes down from the cloud as chips get smarter
- Tajikistan bets on giant dam to solve electricity crisis
- Uruguay bucks 2024 global warming trend
- Last 2 years crossed 1.5C global warming limit: EU monitor
- Japan 'poop master' gives back to nature
- US Supreme Court to hear TikTok ban case
- US Fed's December rate cut should be its last for now: official
- Paris Hilton among celebrities to lose homes in LA fires
- Airbus boosts plane deliveries in 2024
- Ubisoft reviews restructuring options, postpones new Assassin's Creed
- Lamborghini sets new sales record amidst hybrid push
- Lebanon army chief Aoun becomes president after two-year vacancy
- US emissions stagnated in 2024, challenging climate goals: study
- Lebanon army chief short of required majority in first round of president vote
- Global stock markets mixed tracking US rates outlook
- Lebanon meets to finally elect president after two-year vacancy
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires, lose houses as Hollywood events scrapped
- Japan startup hopeful ahead of second moon launch
- Ukraine allies to hold last defence meet before Trump takes office
- Myanmar military adopts anti-junta fighters' drone tactics
- CES tech looks to help world's aging population
- Rubber tappers forge sustainable future in Amazon
- US astronauts upbeat seven months into eight-day mission
- Extreme weather, suburban sprawl fuel LA's wildfires
- Political chess or true beliefs? Zuckerberg's surprise Trump pivot
- US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation, tariffs: minutes
- Celebrities flee Los Angeles fires as Hollywood events scrapped
- Several US Fed officials concerned over 'stalled' disinflation: minutes
- US tech titans ramp up pressure on EU
- 'Wicked' tops SAG Awards nominations
- Safe from looting, Damascus museum reopens a month after Assad's fall
- Award-winning migrant actor earns visa to stay in France -- as a mechanic
- Celebrities forced to flee Los Angeles blazes
- US tariff and inflation fears rattle global markets
- US private sector hiring undershoots expectations: ADP
- US tariffs unlikely to have 'significant' inflation impact: Fed official
- Lebanon leaders in talks for new bid to elect president
- Antarctic sea ice rebounds from record lows: US scientists
- Can EU stand up to belligerent Big Tech in new Trump era?
- US, Canadian and Australian travellers now face UK entry fee
- Indonesia upholds iPhone 16 sales ban after Apple offers $1 bn investment
- UK's Catherine turns 43 hoping for better year
- OpenAI chief Sam Altman denies sister's sexual abuse accusations
- Germans turn to balcony solar panels to save money
- Samsung warns fourth-quarter profit to miss forecasts
- Brazil gears up for first climate conference in Amazon
- Iraqi archaeologists piece together ancient treasures ravaged by IS
Ethiopia starts generating power at Nile mega-dam
Ethiopia began generating electricity from its mega-dam on the Blue Nile on Sunday, a milestone in the controversial multi-billion dollar project.
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, accompanied by high-ranking officials, toured the power station and pressed a series of buttons on an electronic screen, a move that officials said initiated production.
The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) is set to be the largest hydroelectric scheme in Africa but has been at the centre of a dispute with downstream nations Egypt and Sudan ever since work first began in 2011.
Abiy described Sunday's development as "the birth of a new era".
"This is a good news for our continent & the downstream countries with whom we aspire to work together," he said on Twitter.
Addis Ababa deems the project essential for the electrification and development of Africa's second most populous country, but Cairo and Khartoum fear it could threaten their access to vital Nile waters.
Abiy, wearing sunglasses and a khaki-coloured hat emblazoned with the Ethiopian flag as he toured the site, dismissed those concerns.
"As you can see this water will generate energy while flowing as it previously flowed to Sudan and Egypt, unlike the rumours that say the Ethiopian people and government are damming the water to starve Egypt and Sudan," he said as water rushed through the concrete colossus behind him.
But Cairo denounced Sunday's start-up, with the foreign ministry saying Addis Ababa was "persisting in its violations" of a declaration of principles on the project signed by the three nations in 2015.
- 'Resisting external pressure' -
The $4.2-billion (3.7-billion-euro) dam is ultimately expected to produce more than 5,000 megawatts of electricity, more than doubling Ethiopia's current output.
Only one of 13 turbines is currently operational, with an installed capacity of 375 megawatts.
A second will come online within a few months, project manager Kifle Horo told AFP, adding that the dam is currently expected to be fully completed in 2024.
The 145-metre (475-foot) high structure straddles the Blue Nile in the Benishangul-Gumuz region of western Ethiopia, near the border with Sudan.
Egypt, which depends on the Nile for about 97 percent of its irrigation and drinking water, sees the dam as an existential threat.
Sudan hopes the project will regulate annual flooding, but fears its own dams could be harmed without agreement on the GERD's operation.
Both have long been pushing for a binding deal over the filling and operation of the massive dam, but African Union-sponsored talks have failed to achieve a breakthrough.
William Davison, senior analyst at the International Crisis Group, said the GERD is seen domestically "as a symbol of Ethiopia resisting external pressure".
"The government has propagated the idea that foreign actors are trying to undermine Ethiopia's sovereignty, so I think this will be cast as showing they are still making progress despite a hostile environment."
Addisu Lashitew of the Brookings Institution in Washington added that the GERD's commissioning was a "rare positive development that can unite a deeply fractured country" after 15 months of brutal conflict with Tigrayan rebels.
"The newly-generated electricity from the GERD could help revive an economy that has been devastated by the combined forces of a deadly war, rising fuel prices and the Covid-19 pandemic," he said.
- Project delays -
The dam was initiated under former prime minister Meles Zenawi, the Tigrayan leader who ruled Ethiopia for more than two decades until his death in 2012.
Civil servants contributed one month's salary towards the project in the year of the project launch, and the government has since issued dam bonds targeting Ethiopians at home and abroad.
But officials on Sunday credited Abiy with reviving the dam after what they claim was mismanagement delayed its progress.
"Our country has lost so much because the dam was delayed, especially financially," project manager Kifle said at the launch ceremony.
The process of filling the GERD's vast reservoir began in 2020, with Ethiopia announcing in July of that year it had hit its target of 4.9 billion cubic metres.
The reservoir’s total capacity is 74 billion cubic metres, and the target for 2021 was to add 13.5 billion.
Last July Ethiopia said it had hit that target, meaning there was enough water to begin producing energy, although some experts had cast doubt on the claims.
Kifle declined to reveal how much water was collected last year or what the target is for the coming rainy season.
P.Schmidt--CPN