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The major river in Ethiopia is the Blue Nile. However, most drinking water in Ethiopia comes from ground water, not rivers. Ethiopia has 12 river basins with an annual runoff volume of 122 billion m 3 of water and an estimated 2.6–6.5 billion m 3 of ground water potential.
Ethiopia has no agreement with Egypt or Sudan about the sharing of the river's water. Egypt says that its historic water rights would be violated by dams in Ethiopia and that its water security would be affected. Egypt and Sudan concluded a water sharing treaty in 1959. The agreement does not consider the water rights of other Nile riparian states.
Rivers of Ethiopia (8 C, 146 P) S. Springs of Ethiopia (2 C) Pages in category "Bodies of water of Ethiopia" This category contains only the following page.
This is a list of streams and rivers in Ethiopia, arranged geographically by drainage basin. There is an alphabetic list at the end of this article. There is an alphabetic list at the end of this article.
Channelization made it one of the most heavily used bodies of water in the Port of New York and New Jersey. Worsened by the Greenpoint oil spill, raw sewage from New York City's sewer system, [174] and other accumulation from a total of 1,491 sites. [175] Totally devoid of any lifeforms by the end of the 19th century. [176] Ohio River
Climate change is predicted to increase the water deficiency in all seasons and for parts of the basin, due to a projected increase in temperature and decrease in precipitation. [ 5 ] The Awash River basin is the most developed, utilized, abused, impacted, and most populous (over 15% or nearly 18.6 million out of 120 million) basin in Ethiopia ...
The water from Kajauli reaches to treatment plant of Chandigarh in 39 Sector and it fed 5 other waterworks of the city includes Sector 52, 37,32,26 and 12. [3] From Single phase, Chandigarh is receiving 14.5 Million Gallon, Mohali 2.5 MGD, Chandimandir 1.5 MGD and Panchkula 1.5 MGD. [4]
The Gibe III Hydroelectric dam is a 243 metres (797 ft) high roller-compacted concrete dam with an associated hydropower plant on the Omo River in Ethiopia. It is the largest hydropower plant in Ethiopia with a power output of about 1870 Megawatt (MW), thus more than doubling total installed capacity in Ethiopia from its 2007 level of 814 MW.