KHARTOUM, Jan. 3 (YPA) – Sudan on Sunday is to join a new round of talks with Egypt and Ethiopia in a bid to resolve the dispute over Ethiopia’s Renaissance Dam on the Blue Nile, Sudanese state media reported.
The three countries have held multiple rounds of talks since Ethiopia broke ground on the project in 2011 but they have so far failed to produce an agreement on the filling and operation of the vast reservoir behind the 145-meter (475-foot) tall dam.
The last, held by video-conference in early November, broke up without making any headway.
Sudan’s state news agency SUNA said that officials from current African Union chair South Africa would be involved in the new round of talks.
Citing an unnamed official, SUNA said Sudan would propose granting African Union experts a “bigger role” in the negotiations for a binding agreement on the dam’s filling and operation.
The European Union, an observer of the dam negotiations, welcomed the upcoming talks in a statement, saying they provided an “important opportunity for progress” towards an agreement.
Ethiopia says the hydroelectric power produced at the dam is vital to meet the power needs of its even larger population.
Sudan, which suffered deadly floods last summer when the Blue Nile reached its highest level since records began more than a century ago, hopes that the new dam will help regulate the river’s flow.
The Blue Nile, which meets the White Nile in the Sudanese capital Khartoum, provides the great majority of the combined Nile’s flow through northern Sudan and Egypt to the Mediterranean.
E.M