For more than a decade, the Ethiopia GERD has represented hope to millions of Ethiopians who contributed their savings, their salaries, and their belief to a project that promised electricity, dignity, and development. For others in the region, particularly Egypt, it has represented uncertainty and fear about water security. That tension has turned a hydroelectric project into one of the most consequential geopolitical issues in Africa.
Today, the conversation around Ethiopia GERD sovereignty is resurfacing in a new context. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s recent visit to the United Arab Emirates signals deepening diplomatic and economic engagement between Ethiopia and key Gulf partners. The UAE has become increasingly active in the Horn of Africa, supporting peace initiatives, investing in infrastructure, and positioning itself as a stabilizing force in regional politics.
These relationships matter. Ethiopia needs investment. It needs strategic partnerships. It needs economic growth. In fact, the government has projected robust economic expansion for the coming fiscal year, signaling confidence in its trajectory. Yet partnerships must never come at the expense of sovereignty, particularly when it comes to a project that Ethiopians consider sacred.
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UAE Diplomacy and Shifting Horn of Africa Geopolitics
The GERD is no longer a proposal. It is operational. It is generating electricity. It is powering homes and industries. The debate, therefore, cannot be about whether Ethiopia has the right to use the Blue Nile. That question was settled the moment construction began and the first turbines turned.
The real issue is how Ethiopia cooperates with its neighbors while protecting its autonomy.
Many Ethiopians remember the events of 2020 and 2021 when U.S.-brokered negotiations produced a draft agreement widely viewed at home as favoring downstream interests. The perception that Ethiopia was being pressured to accept water release conditions that would limit its sovereign control left a lasting scar. The memory of that moment still shapes public opinion. It created a deeply rooted skepticism toward any externally driven mediation that appears tilted or coercive.
Now, as geopolitical alignments shift and regional diplomacy intensifies, Ethiopia faces a delicate balance. Egypt continues to leverage its diplomatic influence and regional partnerships to reinforce its position on the Nile. Gulf states are expanding their strategic footprint in the Horn of Africa. Global powers see the Red Sea corridor and the Nile Basin as critical to broader security interests.
In that environment, Ethiopia must be clear-eyed.
African Union Mediation, International Water Law, and GERD Negotiations
There is nothing wrong with dialogue. In fact, dialogue is necessary. Data sharing, drought coordination, technical cooperation, and early warning systems are all responsible measures between neighbors who share a river. But cooperation cannot morph into concession. Technical coordination must not become political subordination.
International water law speaks of equitable and reasonable utilization. That principle matters. It recognizes that upstream countries have rights just as downstream countries do. For too long, the Nile narrative was dominated by historical arrangements that excluded upstream states. GERD was, in part, Ethiopia’s correction of that history.
Recent diplomatic engagement with the UAE should be understood within this broader strategic landscape. Gulf partnerships can support Ethiopia’s economic transformation. They can strengthen trade and regional peace. But any perception that Ethiopia might dilute its GERD position in exchange for short-term diplomatic gains would generate profound domestic backlash.
Ethiopia’s Domestic Consensus and the Political Stakes of the GERD Dispute
The Ethiopian public is not indifferent. The dam was financed in large part by ordinary citizens. It was built during moments of political turbulence and economic strain. It became a symbol of unity in a country often divided by politics and ethnicity. That collective ownership means that any agreement perceived as compromising the dam’s utility would face enormous resistance.
At the same time, complete disengagement from negotiations is not a viable strategy. Isolation would serve no one. Ethiopia must remain engaged, but on clear principles.
First, African-led frameworks should remain central. The African Union offers a venue that reflects continental ownership and reduces the appearance of great power bias.
Second, discussions must remain technical and evidence-based. Hydrology, rainfall variability, reservoir management, and climate patterns should guide policy, not geopolitical bargaining.
Third, Ethiopia’s right to develop must remain non-negotiable. The dam exists to power economic growth and lift citizens out of poverty. Any agreement that fundamentally constrains that purpose would undermine the project’s reason for being.
GERD is a test. Not only of engineering capacity, but of political will. It tests whether post-colonial states can assert their rights peacefully but firmly in a system where power often shapes narratives.
The turbines are turning. The water is flowing. The lights are coming on in towns that were once dark. That reality should frame the conversation moving forward.
Ethiopia must engage the world confidently, build partnerships strategically, and negotiate responsibly. But it must never forget why GERD was built in the first place.
Sovereignty is not a slogan. It is a responsibility. And on the Nile, that responsibility now belongs to Ethiopia.
By Yuri Tadesse
Yuri Tadesse is an international business professional, financial consultant, and diplomatic leader with decades of experience bridging governments, corporations, and global institutions across Africa, the Middle East, Europe, Asia, and the Americas. A two-time appointee to U.S. Presidential Delegations to Africa and member of the Council on Foreign Relations, he has advised Fortune 500 companies, foreign governments, and senior political leaders, while holding leadership roles alongside figures such as President Bill Clinton and Reverend Jesse L. Jackson Sr. He is the Founder and CEO of Corcovado Investment & Advisory Group and Senior Partner at AzulBlue Capital Partners, where he provides strategic counsel on global trade, investment, and international development.









