Let's Talk Afro-Geopolitics: Hydro-Power in the Case of Ethiopia and the D.R. Congo

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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ETHIOPIA'S LEADERS ARE WAY TOO STRATEGIC!
WHEN Eritrea gained its independence from Ethiopia in 1993, Ethiopia became landlocked and therefore dependent on its neighbours – especially Djibouti – for access to international markets. This dependency has hampered Ethiopia’s aspiration to emerge as the uncontested regional power in the Horn of Africa.

Recently, however, the ground has been shifting. As we point out in a recent article, Ethiopia has attempted to take advantage of the recent involvement of various Arab Gulf States in the Horn of Africa’s coastal zone to reduce its dependency on Djibouti’s port. The port currently accounts for 95% of Ethiopia’s imports and exports. It has done so by actively trying to interest partners in the refurbishment and development of other ports in the region: Port Sudan in Sudan, Berbera in the Somaliland region of Somalia, and Mombasa in Kenya.

But it is Berbera, in particular, that will prove the most radical in terms of challenging regional power dynamics as well as international law. This is because a port deal involving Somaliland will challenge Djibouti’s virtual monopoly over maritime trade. In addition, it may entrench the de-facto Balkanization of Somalia and increase the prospects of Ethiopia becoming the regional hegemon.

ETHIOPIA’S REGIONAL POLICY

Ethiopia’s interest in Berbera certainly makes sense from a strategic perspective. It is closest to Ethiopia and will connect the eastern, primarily Somali region of Ethiopia to Addis Ababa. It will also provide a much needed outlet for trade, particularly the export of livestock and agriculture.

The development and expansion of the port at Berbera supports two primary pillars of Ethiopia’s regional policy. The first is maintaining Eritrea’s isolation. The aim would be to weaken it to the point that it implodes and is formally reunited to Ethiopia. Or it becomes a pliant, client state.

Horn-of-Africa-map.jpg

Horn of Africa.

The second pillar rests on maintaining the status quo in post-civil war Somalia. Simply put, a weak and fractured Somalia enables Ethiopia to focus on quelling persistent internal security difficulties. It also keeps up pressure on Eritrea.

Ethiopia’s ambitions for Berbera have been hampered by two problems. Firstly the Republic of Somaliland – a de-facto independent state since 1991 – still isn’t recognised internationally. This makes engagement a political and legal headache. Secondly, Ethiopia, doesn’t have the critical resources needed to invest and build a port.

Ethiopia had been trying to get Abu Dhabi and Dubai interested in the Berbera Port for years. It’s latest push was assisted by a number of factors. These included a shift in the UAE’s military focus in Yemen and Ethiopian assurances of more trade and some financing to upgrade the port.

Ethiopia’s diplomatic push – which coincided with developments across the Gulf of Aden – finally got it the result it craved. In May 2016, DP World, a global mega-ports operator, signed an agreement to develop and manage Berbera Port for 30 years.

THE BERBERA PORT DEAL

It is unlikely that DP World would have signed the deal if it didn’t see some long-term commercial benefit. The deal also includes economic, military and political dimensions.

Economically, for example, there will be investments in Somaliland’s fisheries, transportation and hospitality industry. The UAE will also establish a military installation in Berbera. The base is intended to help the UAE tighten its blockade against Yemen and stop weapons being smuggled from Iran.

Politically, the Berbera Port deal has provoked mixed reactions in Somaliland. There has been some popular anger aimed at Somaliland’s former president, Ahmed Mohamed Mohamoud aka “Silanyo”, and his family who reportedly benefited personally from it. Anger also stems from inter-clan and sub-clan rivalry over land, particularly in the Berbera area.

But the anger in Somaliland pales in comparison to the reaction in Mogadishu. This is because the Somaliland government has remained largely isolated internationally – until the port deal.

Somalia Federal Government ministers have publicly challenged the right of Somaliland to enter into official agreements with any country. The Ethiopian-driven deal means that Mogadishu’s claims over the breakaway territory have weakened substantially. The deal means that Somaliland has partially broken the glass ceiling of international recognition by entering into substantive deals with viable business partners and states operating on the global stage. Mogadishu can no longer pretend it controls the government in Somaliland’s capital Hargeisa.

ETHIOPIA WINS

The bottom line is that Ethiopia has engineered access to another port and enhanced its security and strategic economic interests. With the growth in annual volumes of transit cargo, Ethiopia has, for a long time, needed alternative routes from Djibouti.

In addition, Ethiopia has ensured its presence in the running of the port by acquiring a 19% share in the deal.

And by wangling a legally binding agreement between Somaliland and another state, Ethiopia has potentially paved the way for eventual international recognition of Hargeisa.

Ethiopia has also further cemented its hold over Somaliland through a combination of pressure and material incentives. By bringing significant outside investment and recognition, Ethiopia can also increasingly meddle in its internal affairs. This is a conundrum for Hargeisa. It finds itself increasingly emboldened to act independently. Yet it remains constrained by the need to get Addis Ababa’s approval.

As Ethiopia begins to move increasing amounts of goods and services on Somaliland’s new highway to the refurbished port of Berbera, Hargeisa may begin to question key aspects of the port deal.

But one aspect will not be in question: Ethiopia’s rising power and influence over the entire region.
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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This what happen when you dont have c00ns/puppets in power:scust:


I also heard Ethiopia ban cacs from adopting they kids

Definitely. Of course, various nations have limitations and potentials but those can be overcome by thinking outside the box. Ethiopia has no ports so now it's trying to gain a minority stake in ports neighbouring countries AND building a navy.

But then take Congo's leaders, sure they're developing the Inga Dam but their leaders are fermenting ethnic unrest in Kasai and allowing foreigners (notably Israelis) to milk the country's mineral riches
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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CRUCIAL ARTICLE ABOUT ETHIOPIA'S TRANSFORMATION AND ELECTRICITY GEOPOLITICS
A QUESTION OF POWER: Why Ethiopia’s economic transformation is a cautionary African tale

Excerpt:
Ethiopia’s external imbalance and attendant foreign exchange crises emanate from over-investment in infrastructure. Ethiopia adopted an infrastructure-led growth strategy known as the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP) in 2010. It has since doubled electricity generation from 1800 to 4200 MW, against peak power requirement of 2000 MW. There is close to 7,000MW of new power projects under construction. The Ethiopia Grand Renaissance dam alone has a capacity of 6450 MW. When these are completed, Ethiopia’s generation capacity will be more than four times domestic demand. The road network has been expanded two-and-a-half fold, from 44 km to 110 km of road per 1000 square kilometres. And there is of course the 670-km Addis-Djibouti railway, and a light rail system for Addis Ababa, operational since late 2015 .

AND:
Ethiopia’s biggest electricity customer potentially is Egypt. This may begin to explain the reason for the olive branch. Prime Minister Abiy also made a quick visit to Somalia last week. He might be hoping to sell some electricity there. To flog a billion dollars worth of power, Ethiopia will need to make peace with all her neighbours, and then some. If truth be told, the electricity export bonanza is a fig leaf.

There is a cold reality that the Ethiopian government seems to be still in denial about. Its heterodox macroeconomic regime is now untenable Investors do not like putting their money in places where it is difficult to get out. And now that people know how precarious the situation is, hard currency hoarding and capital flight will get worse, not better. The competing destinations for the export processing investment that Ethiopia is building industrial parks for do not have exchange controls. And Ethiopia has many disadvantages to overcome, not least, being landlocked, not to mention its byzantine bureaucracy and anti-capitalist instinct. Financial liberalisation is inevitable, a matter of when and how, not if. The Prime Minister talked of the foreign exchange problem being a long term problem. He is dead wrong. He has eighteen months—best case scenario. His options boil down to whether to do big bang or gradual – rather like choosing whether to do your root canals all at once or every other week.
 

2Quik4UHoes

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Figured this should be bumped given the growing tensions. It’s really getting interesting as Egypt does every form of saber rattling crying to the UN and US like a good neocolonial poodle. Anti aircraft missiles are installed all around the GERD so militarily there’s not many viable options for Sisi without seriously overstepping his bounds. Surely there will be terrorist actions and criminality in order to meet their goals. Which at that point I’d love nothing more for ET to blow up Aswan and bomb on Suez as a means of crippling them. Y’all gotta understand, the Egypt vs Ethiopia beef runs all the way back to ancient times so it’s no love lost. fukk em all except for the Black ones and the cool Arabs that aren’t racist scum.



This the kinda energy ET is dealing with. Pompous, arrogant, entitled, racist, energy even tho they not even the original inhabitants of the land. Sand cac Egyptians are absolutely losing their shyt cuz Ethiopia not rockin and there’s not a goddamn thing they can do about it.
 

JDH

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Figured this should be bumped given the growing tensions. It’s really getting interesting as Egypt does every form of saber rattling crying to the UN and US like a good neocolonial poodle. Anti aircraft missiles are installed all around the GERD so militarily there’s not many viable options for Sisi without seriously overstepping his bounds. Surely there will be terrorist actions and criminality in order to meet their goals. Which at that point I’d love nothing more for ET to blow up Aswan and bomb on Suez as a means of crippling them. Y’all gotta understand, the Egypt vs Ethiopia beef runs all the way back to ancient times so it’s no love lost. fukk em all except for the Black ones and the cool Arabs that aren’t racist scum.



This the kinda energy ET is dealing with. Pompous, arrogant, entitled, racist, energy even tho they not even the original inhabitants of the land. Sand cac Egyptians are absolutely losing their shyt cuz Ethiopia not rockin and there’s not a goddamn thing they can do about it.

The UN security council is supposed to have a meeting about it today
 

2Quik4UHoes

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The UN security council is supposed to have a meeting about it today

I could care less. That was the work of bytch ass Egypt. Sudan just got some World Bank money so they gon behave and take them poodle nikkaz side knowing damn well what the truth is.

UN Sec Council need to be resolving real issues. Not tryna uphold hydro-hegemony for bum ass Egypt tryna hold on to ole colonial standards. Swear to God I just want us to slide on Sisi fukk the talkin just whoop they ass like Yohannes IV did in the 19th century since they wanna bring up old ass treaties n shyt :pachaha:
 
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JDH

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I could care less. That was the work of bytch ass Egypt. Sudan just got some World Bank money so they gon behave and take them poodle nikkaz side knowing damn well what the truth is.

UN Sec Council need to be resolving real issues. Not tryna uphold hydro-hegemony for bum ass Egypt tryna hold on to ole colonial standards. Swear to God I just want us to slide on Sisi fukk the talkin just whoop they ass like Yohannes IV did in the 19th century since they wanna bring up old ass treaties n shyt :pachaha:
Yes but Abiy is the one who agreed to US and world bank arbitration which the previous administration had refused. But they were smart enough to step away from the negotiations in the final phase and not sign an agreement. Lol Ras Alula a legend i dont think he lost a single battle. This shyt is not even about technical issues that is just their excuse, Egypt just dont wanna see Ethiopia develop. A stable and powerful Ethiopia controlling the source of their livelihood (Nile) would completely change the power dynamic in the ethio-egypt relationship and the wider region as a whole.


The world bank sending lowkey threats not to start filling without a deal in place or they will withhold financing. This thing became hella internationalized

 
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