The environmental management of this vital
water tower of Africa, with its implications for global security, is among the
most pressing issues of our time. No one could have been more aware of the enormous
challenges than Meles Zenawi. The late prime minister’s core message was that
tomorrow’s problems cannot be solved with yesterday’s thinking.
MELES
ZENAWI’S TWO VISIONS OF ETHIOPIA
Following
the death in August of Ethiopia’s prime minister, Meles Zenawi, the
International Monetary Fund has made polite suggestions to the new leadership
regarding elements of the country’s 2011-2015 Growth and Transformation Plan.
The GTP, a brainchild of Mr Meles, is a crucial and extremely ambitious stage
in a process aimed to transform Ethiopia into a middle-income nation by 2025.
The IMF is urging caution in certain sectors. “I think there’s a need to
rethink some of those projects a little bit to make sure that they don’t absorb
all domestic financing just for that project”, IMF country representative
Jan Mikkelsen told reporters in Addis Ababa on 13
September. “If you suck in all domestic financing to just a few projects that
money will be used for this and not for normal trade and normal business.” Mr
Mikkelsen
did
not specify any particular project.
This
adds to previous concerns of the
IMF
and
World Bank on Ethiopia’s macroeconomic situation. On leaving his post in
2011 World Bank country representative to Ethiopia,
Ken Ohashi, wrote that Ethiopia risks “getting into serious
problems” in its head-long rush into “aggressive” publicly-funded,
capital-intensive projects that constrain local demand and “crowd out” private
business. “On debt there is a danger,” Mr Ohashi wrote. “If this public
investment-led growth at some point really stumbles or stagnates for a while
then all these debt equations could unravel.”
Such
concerns over aspects of the GTP have also been expressed by many Ethiopian
economists as well as academics from other fields. The US$ 4.5 billion Grand
Renaissance Dam on the River Abay or Blue Nile - “
Africa’s greatest dam” and Ethiopia’s most ambitious
project to date - has been singled out by many for particular attention. Egypt
and Sudan, who will be exposed to most risk from the dam, have been the
most outspoken. The GR dam is only one of a series of
controversial, mega-scale projects - including more dams, farms and sugar
enterprises encircling the plateau - which form a substantial part of the $79
billion, 5-year GTP.
Comment
on Ethiopian affairs by foreigners has often been regarded with suspicion by
the famously independent Ethiopians. Mr Meles was particularly
dismissive of Mr Ohashi’s macroeconomic analysis. Responses
to the recent IMF suggestions range from polite rejection by the new
government, to outright hostility from others who see this as an international,
imperialist conspiracy linking the IMF with an ancient Egyptian plot to control
the waters of the Nile. Yet there are other Ethiopians, no less proud of their
country, who are pleased that the IMF has spoken out to give more weight to
their own grave and urgent concerns about where Ethiopia is heading with its GTP.
Ethiopia’s
government says it will not reschedule construction of the GR dam.
Communications Minister Bereket Simon, who co-chairs a fundraising committee
for the project,
said of the dam, “It was a well-considered plan and it is
one of the mega projects for which the government commits itself
unconditionally.” Ethiopian officials have vowed to implement the
industrialisation program of Mr Meles and will finance the dam through the sale
of bonds, primarily to Ethiopians. More than any other project, damming the
mighty Abay symbolises Ethiopia’s hoped-for Renaissance. “This is the
brainchild of the late prime minister and we want to show commitment to his
vision,” Mr Bereket said.
However,
the Growth and Transformation Plan - with the GR dam as its centre piece - is
only one part of Mr Meles’ greater, green vision for Ethiopia. The country’s
National Program of Action (NAPA) to adapt to climate change was initiated in
2009, followed by the
Climate Resilient Green Economy Strategy launched in
November 2011, the first of its kind in the world. Aimed to restore,
protect and develop Ethiopia’s ravaged environment and build a balanced, carbon
free economy by 2025, the $150 billion
CRGE, as “the path to sustainable
development”, will naturally stem from the ground-up, building on green growth
achieved over the past 20 years and exploring new green fields. In his
speeches
of the last few years Mr Meles expressed with increasing conviction that “the
future of the world is green” and the green economy is the only viable route
towards “Africa’s structural economic transformation.”
In
his vision for Ethiopia’s Green Renaissance, Mr Meles hoped that the mega-scale
strategies of the GTP would
“supplement” his long-term commitment to sustainable
development through commercial smallholder farms, ambitious environmental
rehabilitation programs and a green technology revolution. His greatest
challenge was to coordinate the two apparent opposites: the
top-down strategies of the Growth and
Transformation Plan with the
ground-up
strategies of the Climate Resilient Green Economy. This challenge, now passed
on to the new government “committed to his vision”, cannot be overstated.
History
shows that Ethiopia’s lowlands where many of the multi-billion dollar projects
are taking place - including the GR dam - are difficult and costly places to
manage and control, let alone ‘develop’. The environmental, social and economic
transformation of these precarious landscapes in such hostile climates on the
scales envisaged by the GTP could have unintended consequences of equally large
scales across Eastern Africa, the Horn and Southern Arabia all the way to the
Middle East and beyond. In an increasingly volatile and uncertain world where
worse-case scenarios must always be considered, Ethiopia’s new government, led
by Hailemariam Desalegne, faces important questions. Are the concerns of
outsiders like the IMF and the World Bank worth listening to? Should the
government consider “rethinking” elements of the GTP? And what are the risks if
they don’t?
THE
HIDDEN COSTS AND RISKS OF ‘BROWN’ DEVELOPMENT IN ETHIOPIA
Since
independence, African leaders responsible for the welfare of millions of
impoverished and vulnerable people have insisted on ‘development at all costs.’
While this once seemed justified, some of those costs, or trade-offs, have
become so high that development may never be achieved. The problems arise from
not being able to measure and therefore mitigate those costs. One of the major
failings of the development model inherited by Africa is an accounting system
that measures economic success by gross domestic product, a simple calculation
that does not include externalities or ‘hidden’ costs and therefore tells us
nothing about sustainability. Many of the world’s top economists are calling
for “
an end to the fetish with GDP.” The UN’s 2010 study of The Economics of Ecology and Biodiversity (
TEEB)
was a great international leap forward for
green
accounting as a way to assess
“the global economic costs of ecosystem degradation and biodiversity loss, and
to recommend solutions to policymakers, administrators, businesses and
individuals.”
The
reason why the IMF, World Bank and an increasing number of
global
institutions, organisations and individuals are concerned with the
mega-scale elements of Ethiopia’s GTP is because the hidden costs of these 20
th
century development strategies are now well-known, there are more of them and
they are increasing as the planet heats up, populations rise, resources are
depleted and eco-systems break down. Between 1960 and 1990 the high carbon,
resource intensive, ecologically degrading and socially divisive ‘brown’ development
model incurred costs in Africa, and especially Ethiopia, which were rapid and
severe. Risk management at the time was unknown. Billions of dollars’ worth of
investments across the continent were abandoned resulting in billions of dollars
of debt and millions of starving or destitute people. Many countries suffered more
than a “lost decade.”
Economies
of scale, as we know them, are notoriously difficult to achieve in Africa’s
unpredictable and often hostile conditions. In addition to the potentially huge
environmental, social, cultural and geo-political costs of Ethiopia’s
export-driven, mega projects there are economic costs. Some result from the
siltation of reservoirs and irrigation systems (
“the cancer of dams”), water losses
through high evaporation rates,
virtual
water losses through inappropriate crops, salination, degradation of soils
and a host of virulent tropical diseases - plant and human - leading to well-documented
inefficiencies and
diminishing
returns. Others arise from project cost overruns, rising input costs and
fluctuating export prices over which Ethiopia has no control. On a local scale
valuable traditional economies, or external benefits, can be quickly wiped out.
On a national scale there are economic costs pointed out by the IMF, World Bank
and others - a crowding out of private sector investment and a slow down in
household consumption against a back-drop of accelerating and possibly
unsustainable public debt.
Economic
costs to investors can also be incurred through a form of unintended ‘
financial repression’ when the return on government bonds
at, say, 6 per cent for the GR dam is less than inflation which soared to more
than 40 per cent in Ethiopia in 2011 and is hovering around 20 per cent. Also,
the rising displeasure of lowland Ethiopians who feel they are being sidelined
in the development of their ancestral lands, and the recent
rumour
that Egypt and Sudan are collaborating on a plan to bomb the GR dam, which lies
only 40 km from the Sudanese border, raises the possibility of massive economic
costs for security.
There
are other major risks in the large-scale strategies of the GTP. In this
geologically active part of the world the seismic risks to dams are
particularly high and have been
well-documented.
Also the 20
th century dream of exporting hydro-power to Djibouti,
Sudan, Kenya and even Egypt – some of the sunniest countries on earth - could
be short-lived as a new generation of leaders in those countries, with a new
generation of solar technologies, are more likely to produce their own endless,
cheap and stable supplies rather than rely on precarious and inefficient hydro-power
transported for thousands of kilometres across hostile lands from Ethiopia’s
diminishing rivers. One long dry spell like the Great Drought of 1968-73 which
ravaged the African Sahel, including Ethiopia, could severely impact revenues of
the water-intensive projects of the GTP. Climate change can only make things
worse.
Another
potentially expensive strategy of the GTP is to settle Ethiopia’s many
pastoralists and bring them into the “modern” economy. This return to
"villagization"
is another controversial aspect of Mr Meles’ 20
th century vision where
the government still sees the pastoralists as
“backward”. In Ethiopia where up to 70 per cent of the
land is already subject to desertification and therefore increasingly difficult
for agriculture, the knowledge of the pastoralists, which make up 15 per cent
of the population, will have to play a major role in Ethiopia’s 21
st
century green economy in ways we are only beginning to understand.
Another
looming 21st century cost is the opportunity cost of failing to
achieve Mr Meles’ green vision by locking up billions of dollars, millions of
people and vast eco-systems in the 20th century brown technologies
and economics of the GTP (the Grand Renaissance dam was conceived and designed
in the 1960s). If the brown economy with all its costs and risks dominates
Ethiopia, green investors may be difficult to attract, a historic opportunity
will be lost and Mr Meles’ green vision will remain just a vision.
The
mega-scale strategies risk another opportunity cost of keeping Ethiopians (government
officials and citizens) locked in 20
th century thinking. Most
Ethiopians, including the
opposition
and the Diaspora, seem to be supportive of Mr Meles’ mega projects,
particularly the GR dam. They are buying bonds, convinced of the benefits of
the dam and immensely proud that Ethiopia’s ancient dream of controlling the
Nile is being fulfilled. Some Ethiopians have compared the country’s mega dams
to the great obelisks of Axum as expressions of national strength and pride,
forgetting perhaps that archeologists are still debating how long the two
largest obelisks stood before they collapsed, or even if they stood at all
because the foundations were inadequate for the scales.
If
the GTP mega projects are the ‘magic bullets’ of Ethiopia’s 21
st
century development, like those of the 20
th they could also misfire
and it may not be long before mega
white elephants
appear on Ethiopian horizons. In Ethiopia most large-scale developments of the
post-colonial model were a disappointment. In many cases the hidden costs were
so high that returns on investment were zero. At the June 1992 Lem, or Green,
Meeting in Addis Ababa, Mr Meles in his first green speech, said the “top down”
and “irresponsible” development strategies of the previous government had cost
Ethiopia dearly. The big question is whether today’s top-down decisions are any
more responsible than those made by the Dergue 30 years ago.
In
a rapidly changing world where global business executives are leading the call
for us all to ‘innovate or die’ this might be the time for Ethiopians, who are
among the most vulnerable people on earth, to ask themselves whether 20th
century brown development strategies will give them a resilient 21st
century green economy and middle-income status. Can the people of Ethiopia
afford projects that are ‘too big to fail’ when the hidden costs of some of
them could result in just that?
In
1992, surrounded by the wreckage of irresponsible development strategies of the
previous regime, Mr Meles and Ethiopia embarked on a greener journey. Twenty
years later it is becoming increasingly clear that the external costs of a
GDP-based
brown economy in Ethiopia can no longer be hidden and are
potentially enormous. Across Africa one of the most glaring of those costs –
inequality
- is spreading fast and in some places to dangerous levels. Even with Mr Meles’
extraordinary influence, intellect, energy and vision the successful coordination
of the top-down strategies of the GTP with the ground-up strategies of the CRGE,
on so many diverse and challenging fronts, may not have been possible.
With
the planet in peril and the global economy lurching from one crisis to the
next, Ethiopia’s new leaders have an opportunity to “show commitment” to Mr
Meles’ greater, greener vision and “rethink”, as the IMF suggests, some of the
strategies of the GTP. If not, the costs of those strategies could quickly
outweigh the benefits turning Ethiopia’s hoped-for Renaissance into another
historic decline.
“SOMETHING
BEAUTIFUL” FOR AFRICA AND ETHIOPIA
With
the stakes so high words of caution for Ethiopia come not only from the ‘imperialist’
IMF, World Bank and their allies, but also from China, Ethiopia’s most
important new partner whose state-led, development model inspired Mr Meles and
much of the GTP. At the World Economic Forum on Africa held in Addis Ababa last
May –
Ethiopia’s Moment - Gao Xiqing of the China Investment Forum warned Mr Meles: "Do
not necessarily do what we did". Policies of "sheer economic
growth" should be avoided, he said. "We now suffer pollution and an
unequal distribution of wealth and opportunities...You have a clean sheet of
paper here.
Try to write something beautiful."
Since
the 1992 Lem Meeting and the concurrent Rio Summit in Brazil, the first chapter
of “something beautiful” in Ethiopia and in Africa has been written. It could
be called
Africa and the Green Economy and Meles Zenawi was one of the
main authors.
Africa’s
Consensus Statement to the Rio+20 Summit last June is a summary of that
chapter. If one of the greatest achievements of Rio+20 was recognising the need
for a global green economy as the only viable path to a sustainable future -
for us all – one of the greatest disappointments was not recognising that
Africa has the potential to take the lead. Africa, where the brown economy is
least developed, is where growth in the green economy can be easier, faster and
cheaper.
If
Africa, as Mr Meles once said, is a green field for investment Ethiopia is one
of the greenest parts. In the past 20 years under his leadership Ethiopia has
laid the green foundations and earned the green credentials to play a major
role in accelerating the journey towards a green economy in Africa and the
world. The Cradle of Mankind holds clues not only to our past but also to our
future. The next chapter of "something beautiful" can now be written
on Ethiopia’s clean sheet of paper.
In
“
An
oak falls and the forest sways” - an assessment of Mr Meles’ legacy - the
October Africa Report demonstrates the complexities and wide-ranging challenges
surrounding Mr Meles' succession. The report suggests that the west, led by the
US and Britain, might exploit the vacuum created by his absence by pushing the
new government for political reform. While reform in Ethiopia is necessary, as
it is worldwide, the emphasis on top-down change in Ethiopia at such a critical
stage in the country’s development risks not only destabilising an already
fragile situation but also losing sight of the more immediate opportunity for
changing the situation from the ground-up, in economic development strategies
where revolutionary, democratic decision-making is most urgently needed and can
be most readily advanced.
Ethiopia,
Africa and the world are at a cross roads. The redundant brown economy, which
ignores the hidden costs of economic growth, is having its last big push in
Africa, the final frontier. Ethiopia’s mega projects - dams, farms and sugar
enterprises - are among the most potent symbols of this push, driven by a 20th
century hope that they will bring ‘development.’ Foreign critics of Ethiopia’s
mega projects are often accused by Ethiopians of wanting to keep the people
hungry and in the ‘dark ages.’ While there have always been foreign agents
wishing to keep Ethiopia down the irony is that the hidden costs of the mega
projects might turn the suspicion into a self-fulfilling prophecy.
If
the Congo forest is the planet’s 3rd lung the great, green Ethiopian
plateau with its fertile lowlands is another essential part of the organism
supporting millions of people, countless species and effecting global weather
patterns in ways we might not yet understand. The environmental management of
this vital water tower of Africa, with its implications for global security, is
among the most pressing issues of our time. No one could have been more aware
of the enormous challenges than Meles Zenawi.
After
21 years of Mr Meles’ guidance, Ethiopia is poised for a Renaissance that could
be green and therefore meet the great challenges ahead. The late prime
minister’s core message was that tomorrow’s problems cannot be solved with
yesterday’s thinking. With that in mind this might be the time for
everyone to have a
rethink
of Ethiopia. Creative engagement on the green economy between Ethiopia and its
global partners at this critical time is a historic opportunity that cannot be
missed.
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