Abstract

Sustainable transboundary water resources managements are challenged by water governance problem. Equitable and reasonable use of water resources shared by co-basin countries requires reliable common agreements. International water laws such as UN Watercourses (1997), Helsinki Rules (1966) have provided vital legal instruments for effective management and negotiation over international water courses. However, Nile River use and development has challenged for last several decades due to discriminatory bilateral agreements made during colonial periods. The Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA) provided to achieve equitable use of Nile River and promote regional socioeconomic development is important step advancing to stop unfair water allocation and claim in the region. The enduring claim over water share and use by Egypt and Sudan referring colonial era agreements are unacceptable because they denied legal and natural rights of the upstream countries as well as opposed international water law. With this respect, Ethiopia has natural and legal right to construct Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam. The downstream countries (Egypt and Sudan) should ratify CFA and respect international water laws. Therefore, mutually acceptable cooperative commitment amongst the riparian states of the Nile basin is the only necessary condition for promoting sustainable use and development Nile River as well as achieving peace and security in the Nile river basin. Keywords: UN Watercourses, Helsinki Rules, Nile River basin, downstream countries, international water law principles DOI: 10.7176/IAGS/83-02 Publication date: June 30 th 2020

Highlights

  • The scarce water resource needs partnerships among countries for its sustainable use

  • Summary and Future Prospect 3.1 Summary Transboundary water resources such as Nile River management has challenged by deficiency of agreed conventions among riparian countries and reliable water governance structure

  • Some bilateral agreements made over Nile River during colonial periods are obstacle to their proper implementation and solving disputes in the regions

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Summary

Introduction

The scarce water resource needs partnerships among countries for its sustainable use. Egypt tried to rely on Article 7 of the 1997 UN Convention, which imposes a duty on states to take measures to prevent causing significant harms to other states sharing an international watercourse, to argue that it has a right to limit upper riparian development of the Nile’s water resources.

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