Olof Beckman’s research while affiliated with Lund University and other places

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Publications (2)


The Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, - hydrosolidarity vs nationalism
  • Article

July 2015

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259 Reads

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5 Citations

Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education

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The Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam: Is There a Meeting Point between Nationalism and Hydrosolidarity?
  • Article
  • Full-text available

July 2015

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11,029 Reads

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63 Citations

Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education

The soon-to-be completed Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which will be the largest hydroelectric power plant and among the largest reservoirs in Africa, has highlighted the need for expanding traditional integrated water resources management to better include the cultural, social, and political complexities of large water infrastructure in development projects. The GERD will store a maximum of 74 billion cubic meters of water corresponding to approximately the average annual outflow of the Nile from the Aswan high dam. Undoubtedly, the GERD will be vital for energy production and a key factor for food production, economic development, and poverty reduction in Ethiopia and the Nile Basin. However, the GERD is also a political statement that in one stroke has re-written the hydropolitical map of the Nile Basin. The GERD has become a symbol of Ethiopian nationalism or “renaissance” (hidase in Amharic). A contrasting concept to nationalism is hydrosolidarity. This concept has been put forward to better stress equitable use of water in international water management challenges that would lead to sustainable socioeconomic development. We use the opposing notions of nationalism and hydrosolidarity at three different scales, everyday politics, state policies, and interstate and global politics to analyse some aspects of the new hydropolitical map of the Nile Basin. We argue that nationalism and national interests are not necessarily negative standpoints but that there may instead be a meeting point where regional and national interests join with hydrosolidarity principles. We believe that this meeting point can maximize not only the common good, but also the good from a national interest point of view. For this, it is important not increase collaboration instead of being locked in to the historical narrative of nationalistic culture and historical discourse. This would benefit and improve future sustainability.

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Citations (2)


... Often, geopolitical and economic shifts in the Nile Basin have been analyzed in terms of the impacts of the basin institutions, hydro-politics, and the position of hydro-hegemonic states; e.g., contextualizing the changing power positions among states in the Eastern Nile (Nicol and Cascão, 2011;Cascão, 2009). Concepts related to hydro-solidarity stress how the Nile countries can still engage in collaboration despite pursuing national interests (Abdelhady et al., 2015). Common to the academic literature on Nile cooperation, diplomacy, and institutions is the focus on water issues from a largely state-centric perspective. ...

Reference:

Institutions in the Nile Basin: Extending the Present State of Transboundary Affairs
The Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam: Is There a Meeting Point between Nationalism and Hydrosolidarity?

Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education

... Similarly, article 5(1) addresses that states should adhere to principles of no significant harm in the utilization of the water resources in their territories (CFA, 2010).On the other hand, Ethiopia, Egypt, and Sudan signed the Several pieces of researches were conducted on the impacts of the GERD and its filling on the downstream countries (Wheeler et al, 2016;Liersch et al, 2017;Abdulrahman, 2019;Elsayed et al, 2020). Abdelhady et al (2015) analyzed a new hydro-political map in the Nile basin using nationalism and hydro solidarity. Other studies identified how to address water allocation deadlock (Onencan & Walle, 2018), water security and reservoir operation (Wheeler et al, 2020), and the post-GERD water flow to Gezira Scheme and Lake Nasser (Zhang et al, 2015). ...

The Nile and the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, - hydrosolidarity vs nationalism
  • Citing Article
  • July 2015

Journal of Contemporary Water Research & Education