GUBA, Sept 9 — Ethiopia officially inaugurated Africa's largest hydroelectric dam on Tuesday, a project that will provide energy to millions of Ethiopians while deepening a rift with downstream Egypt that has unsettled the region.
Ethiopia, the continent's second most populous nation with over 120 million people, sees the US$5 billion (RM21 billion) Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam on a tributary of the River Nile as central to its economic ambitions.
The dam's power has gradually increased since the first turbine was turned on in 2022, reaching its maximum capacity of 5,150 MW on Tuesday. That puts it among the 20 biggest hydroelectric dams in the world — about one-quarter of the capacity of China's Three Gorges Dam.
At a ceremony on Tuesday at the site in Guba, an Ethiopian fighter jet flew low over the mist from the dam's white waters, which plunge 170 metres.
Beneath the canopy of a giant Ethiopian flag, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed later addressed a crowd of dozens of dignitaries, including the presidents of Somalia, Djibouti, and Kenya.
"To our (Sudanese and Egyptian) brothers, Ethiopia built the dam to prosper, to electrify the entire region, and to change the history of black people. It is absolutely not to harm its brothers," he said.
Abiy added that Ethiopia will use the energy to improve its citizens' access to electricity and export surplus power to the region.
The dam's reservoir has also flooded an area larger than Greater London, which the government says will provide a steady water supply for irrigation downstream while limiting floods and drought.

Drought restrictions?
Nonetheless, Ethiopia's downstream neighbours have watched the project advance with dread since construction began in 2011.
Egypt, which built its own Aswan High Dam on the Nile in the 1960s, fears the GERD could restrict its water supply during periods of drought and could lead to the construction of other upstream dams.
It has bitterly opposed the dam from the start, arguing that it violates water treaties dating to the British colonial era and poses an existential threat.
Egypt, with a population of about 108 million, depends on the Nile for about 90 per cent of its fresh water.
It will continue to closely monitor developments on the Blue Nile and "exercise its right to take all the appropriate measures to defend and protect the interests of the Egyptian people", Egyptian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tamim Khallaf told Reuters on Monday.
While Egypt has refrained from any direct reprisals against Ethiopia, it has drawn closer in recent years to Addis Ababa's rivals in the Horn of Africa, notably Eritrea.
Meanwhile, Sudan has joined Egypt's calls for legally binding agreements on the dam's filling and operation, but could also benefit from better flood management and access to cheap energy.

'Not a threat'
In 2020, Ethiopia began filling the reservoir in phases while arguing that the dam would not significantly harm downstream countries.
Independent research shows that so far, no major disruptions to downstream flow have been recorded — partly due to favourable rainfall and cautious filling of the reservoir during wet seasons over a five-year period.
In Ethiopia, which has faced years of internal armed conflict, largely along ethnic lines, the GERD has proven a source of national pride, said Ethiopian water researcher Mekdelawit Messay at Florida International University in the United States.
"It has been a banner to rally under, and it shows what we can achieve when unified," she said.
Ethiopia's central bank provided 91 per cent of the project's funding, while nine per cent was financed by Ethiopians through bond sales and gifts, without any foreign assistance, local media has reported.
Sultan Abdulahi Hassan, a farmer who lives near the dam, said the dam has brought electricity to his village.
"We now have refrigerators. We can drink cold water. We now use electricity for everything," he told Reuters at the launch.
While the extra power will help the country's burgeoning bitcoin mining industry, most rural Ethiopians may have to wait a little longer to benefit.
Underdeveloped transmission networks in rural areas are a major constraint on electricity access. While urban areas had a 94 per cent electrification rate as of 2022, just 55 per cent of the country's total population had electricity, according to the World Bank.
