By Esther Nakkazi
Policy makers based in the River Nile Basin, now have a
monitoring tool to support their decisions and present expert analyses with
factual data to communities for better stewardship of the common Nile waters
and environmental resources.
A report on the state of the Nile basin- which, will be
issued every three years- was launched by Betty Bigombe, the Minister of State
for Water and prepared by the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI), an
inter-governmental regional organization for the River Nile recently in
Kampala.
The State of the River Nile Basin Report 2012 was prepared
by NBI staff and funded by the German government through GIZ, is also expected
to generate discussion, trigger common policy interventions and convergence.
“The report takes stock of past actions, present challenges
and future opportunities for improving the stewardship of the Nile, and defines
a list of indicators for monitoring the health of the basin,” said Stanislas
Kamanzi, the minister of Natural resources, Rwanda.
Kamanzi also the chairperson of Nile Council of Water
Ministers said the report, now a flagship knowledge product of the NBI
countries, would promote cooperation amongst Nile riparian states for
successful management of the basin.
In Europe, it has been established that creation of common
basin monitoring tools for transboundary river basins can contribute to mutual
trust and joint policy-making.
As a common planning tool for the River Nile basin, this
report is expected to contribute to the building of trust and confidence
amongst Nile riparian countries, said Dr Nicholas Azza, a water policy
specialist with the NBI who is one of the lead researchers.
And with time it will discern trends into the future
facilitate the understanding of complex issues and will draw attention to
emerging critical happenings, said Dr. Azza.
One of the critical issues about the 4,100-mile River Nile
is access to the waters by upstream countries Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya,
Tanzania, Congo, Burundi, and Rwanda which felt unfairly treated by the
agreements signed by the British in 1920 that favoured downstream countries
Egypt and Sudan.
The upstream countries have been demanding for more access
to the Nile waters and a series of meetings have been held to have a new agreement,
the Cooperative Framework Agreement, which would regulate the water use by
different countries.
“It is comprehensive and important for planning for all
those who will read it. We shall use it to create awareness in our communities
using its accurate information,” said Fekahmed Negash, the Head of the Nile
Basin Administration Directorate.
Negash said in the past they have been presented with
uncoordinated and biased information depending on the source and their
interests but this factual information will now ease that problem.
But it is not your traditional report with a lot of
research, rather many facts were pulled together and policy briefs generated by
NBI staff who carried it out. It has many photos and graphs for easy
readability.
The Nile is the longest river in the world and has a
drainage area exceeding 3 million square kilometers, shared by eleven
countries.
“It is a credible source of information we can rely on and
keep updating. It is a chance to have a better judgment for the good of our
people who share the Nile basin,” said Dr. Sherif M. EL Sayed the head of
Information Central Directorate, Ministry of Water resources and Irrigation in
Egypt.
The 256-page report, and the first ever, however points to
the quality of the Nile waters which has generally deteriorated because of
increases in population, intensification of agricultural activities, industrial
development and accelerating in soil erosion.
It is only in the sparsely populated areas along the Nile
water in countries like Uganda, Tanzania, and Rwanda where the quality is still
within the standards of the riparian countries and the World Health
Organization (WHO).
The launch ceremony was witnessed by members of the Nile
Technical Advisory Committee (Nile-TAC) representing the ten NBI Member States
of Burundi, DR Congo, Egypt, Kenya, Rwanda, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and
Uganda as well as NBI Development Partners, representatives of the Nile Basin
Discourse as well as staff of NBI.
Ends-
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