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Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam? No, photo of dam in India

Ethiopia's massive hydroelectric dam could be Africa's largest, although it's sparked a row with Egypt over who owns the water of the Nile. But the photo on social media shows the Tungabhadra Dam in southwestern India.

Ethiopia’s massive hydroelectric dam could be Africa’s largest, although it’s sparked a row with Egypt over who owns the water of the Nile. But the photo on social media shows the Tungabhadra Dam in southwestern India.


MARY ALEXANDER • 22 March 2024


The huge and controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (Gerd) on the Blue Nile, more than half a century in the making and a source of tension between Ethiopia and Egypt, is 95% complete.

This was announced by the dam’s construction office on 6 March 2024. It said 98% of Gerd’s civil engineering work and 78% of its electromechanical work was done.

At full capacity, the dam could be the largest hydropower project in Africa, supplying electricity to Ethiopia’s 123 million people and to neighbouring countries.

Soon after the announcement, a photo started circulating on social media with the caption “#Grand_Ethiopian_Renaissance_Dam“.

In the photo we see water flowing through the sluices of a dam from a huge reservoir that stretches into the distance. In the foreground is a power station set in parkland.

The claim can also be seen here, here, here, here and here.

Who owns the Nile?

The Nile River flows northward from Sudan, Ethiopia’s western neighbour, through Egypt into the Mediterranean Sea.

Its major tributaries are the Blue Nile, which rises from Lake Tana in the eastern Ethiopian highlands, and the White Nile, which begins at Lake Victoria to the south. The two rivers meet to form the Nile itself in Khartoum, Sudan’s capital.

The Blue Nile is the larger of the Nile’s two tributaries and supplies about 90% of Egypt’s fresh water. Gerd’s massive reservoir has a capacity of about 1.6 years’ worth of the Blue Nile’s average flow.

In September 2023 Ethiopia announced that the fourth and final filling of Gerd’s reservoir was complete.

A feasibility study on Gerd was first conducted in the 1950s. Ethiopia began actual construction in 2011, the year Egypt was in turmoil during the Arab Spring.

Since then, the two countries have repeatedly been at loggerheads over the dam. Egypt sees it as a threat to its water supply, especially during drought. But for Ethiopia Gerd holds obvious benefits.

Ethiopia has recently gone so far as to deploy its army around Gerd and install air defence systems to protect the dam from possible attacks by Egypt.

But does the photo really show the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam?

Tungabhadra Dam in India’s Karnataka state

A reverse image search reveals that the photo is actually of the Tungabhadra Dam in India.

The photo has been posted on news websites, blogs, travel sites and social media as far back as 2019. All identify it as the Tungabhadra Dam.

The dam, also known as Pampa Sagar, lies on the Tungabhadra River outside the city of Hosapete in the southwestern Indian state of Karnataka. It’s the state’s largest dam, providing irrigation, electricity and flood control.

The photo does not show the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.


* Some Facebook and Instagram users may have deleted their posts after Meta’s Third-Party Fact-Checking Program rated their claims as untrue.

Published by Africa Check on 28 March 2024

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