Egypt and Ethiopia have sparred over the development of water from the River Nile for centuries
flood and drought makes people hard to plant crops
In 2015, Egypt and Ethiopia put enough differences aside to construct the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on the river
The countries also signed a deal that strives to ensure fair river access.
every less 2% of water=no 200,000 acre of land with no water
One acre at least makes one family survive
A family in Egypt is on average about five persons. So this means about one million will be jobless
Ethiopia’s dam, in the northern Benishangul-Gumuz region, 20 miles from the Sudan border, will generate more than 6,000MW of electricity once fully operational
This will double output for a country suffering from acute power shortages and where 65% of the population live off-grid and will make Ethiopia Africa’s biggest power exporter
Egypt would not exist if there are no Nile