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Ethiopia, Djibouti Sign Power Interconnection Agreement

ISSUE 222
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This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

Rayale Seeking Change In The ‎Leadership Of The Lower House

Majeerteenya Spreads Lawlessness In Somalia‎

Ethiopia To Use Somaliland's Port‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Mogadishu Tensions Soar As Islamists Declare Jihad On Warlords‎

Militias From Majeerteenya On A Killing Spree‎‎

Shame of a semi-arid region condemned to self-destruction‎

Is the risky business of exploring in anarchic Somalia risking the peace ‎in Puntland?‎

Regional Affairs

No one killed in Puntland operations, Range insists

Ethiopia, Djibouti Sign Power Interconnection Agreement‎

Somalia: Islamists And Warlords Fight for Mogadishu‎

Americans In Horn Of Africa Using New Weapon In Terror War

Navy Says Yemen Pirate Fear 'False Alarm'‎‎‎‎

US Appeals For Calm Amid Tensions In Mogadishu

Politics: Somalia And The War Against Terrorism‎‎

Ethiopia Building 3 Hydropower Dams, Targets Exports‎‎

Explosion kills three, wounds 37

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Written Answers From UK’s House Of Lords

Terror List Snagging Too Many Americans With `Wrong' Name

Celebration Of May 18 In London‎‎‎

Interpol Join Hunt For Killer‎

BAT Shuts Down Its Ugandan Factory

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

SOMALILAND: ANOTHER COUNTRY‎

DISTINCTLY AFRICAN

The War On Terrorism's Forgotten Front

First home-trained Somali police officers graduate‎

Food for thought

Opinions

Somaliland Under Gag Order‎

The Arab-African Relationship: Racism, Denial & Mistrust‎‎‎‎ ‎‎‎‎

The Camouflaged Threat Of Yemen To Allied Forces, Horn Of Africa Region, And Red Sea Ecosystem‎‎

Who Is Rolling Back The Frontiers Of Democracy In Somaliland?

Time For Research And Development (R&D)

Common Wealth States Must Take The Lead And Start ‎Recognizing Somaliland


Addis Ababa, April 22, 2006 – Ethiopia and Djibouti on Friday signed a power interconnection project agreement, enabling Ethiopia to supply electric power to Djibouti.

Under the agreement signed in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, the power interconnection project will cost over 535 million birr (61.64 million U.S. dollars) and is expected to be finalized in 2009.

Four major agreements will be signed in the course of the project, which includes the installation of a 283-km 230kv line from a distribution station in Ethiopia's eastern border town of Dire Dawa to the main distribution station in Djibouti.

The installation work, covering 201 km, would be carried out in the Ethiopian territory, while the remaining 82 km in Djibouti, said the agreement.

The interconnection project will enable remote towns in the two countries get access to hydro electric power services.

Aisha, Dewele, Harewa and Digala towns in Ethiopia as well as the Alisabeh town in Djibouti were included in the interconnection project.

The interconnection project will have a significant contribution in expanding trade relations between the two countries, according to the agreement.

Despite Ethiopia's huge hydroelectric potential, the exploitation rate is only about two percent and its power system is predominantly hydroelectric based and production cost is low.

In the case of Djibouti, the country primarily depends on oil- fired electricity generation. Consequently, the unit cost of power production is significantly higher than in Ethiopia.

Source: Xinhua


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