ALEXANDRIA: Water ministers from Nile Basin countries on Tuesday delayed signing a water-sharing pact already rejected by Egypt and Sudan, who oppose any reduction in their traditional quotas.
Ministers from nine Nile Basin countries and Eritrea, which had observer status at the four-day meeting held in the Egyptian Mediterranean city of Alexandria, put off finalizing the treaty for six months.
Six months was allocated to solve the problem, Ethiopian Minister of Water Resources Asfaw Dingamo told reporters at the end of the meeting.
Before that our technical advisers will sit down and come up with a technical agreement to be signed, he said.
Participants in the two-day meeting in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria had been hoping to establish a permanent body to oversee water allocation. The ministers decided to continue negotiating for the next six months, with the aim of ironing out the points of disagreements through technical committees … to reach a unified agreement between all the countries of the Nile basin, said Egypt s Minister of Irrigation and Water Resources Mohammed Nasreddin Allam, according to MENA.
Other Nile Basin countries, some of which suffer periodic droughts, drafted the Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA) in June at a Democratic Republic of Congo summit that omitted mention of Egypt and Sudan s historic claims.
It is a big victory, a Sudanese official, who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said. They were going to sign the agreement beginning Aug. 1 regardless of Egypt and Sudan.
At the heart of the dispute is a 1929 agreement between Egypt and Great Britain, acting on behalf of its African colonies along the 5,584 kilometer (3,470 mile) river, which gave Egypt veto power over upstream projects.
An agreement between Egypt and Sudan in 1959 allowed Egypt 55.5 billion cubic meters of water each year – 87 percent of the Nile s flow – and Sudan 18.5 billion cubic meters.
Some of the Nile Basin countries, which include Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya and the DRC, say past treaties are unfair and they want an equitable water-sharing agreement that would allow for more irrigation and power projects.
That share is resented by other countries like Rwanda, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Congo, and Burundi. These countries had planned to sign a separate water sharing agreement because of Egypt s intransigence, but agreed to delay the effort following Sudanese mediation.
Sudanese Irrigation Minister Kamal Ali told Sudan s official news agency that the technical teams hope to reach an agreement by January.
Egypt, a mostly arid country that relies on the Nile for the majority of its water, argues that up-stream countries could make better use of rainfall and have other sources of water.
With almost 80 million people, Egypt s water demands are projected to exceed its supply by 2017, according to a government reported published earlier this month.
There is no way Egypt would allow a reduction of its quota, Mona Omar, Egyptian deputy foreign minister for African affairs, told reporters.
Due to the absence of any major dams or hydroelectric projects upstream of it, experts say Egypt can afford to be dismissive of the other states concerns since there is little they can do to impede the Nile s flow.
Egypt sought to downplay the differences after the summit, and said it is proposing economic incentives to the countries.
It s normal that there are disagreements, cabinet spokesman Magdy Rady said at a press conference. (But) there was a unanimous agreement that the resources of the Nile Basin were more than enough if managed properly.
He said Egypt proposes widening the scope of the Nile Basin Initiative, the World Bank funded umbrella group of Nile Basin countries, to include other natural resources. -Agencies