Clouds over the Nile
Another problem is Ethiopia's triumphant inauguration of its dam in September 2025—Africa's largest hydroelectric project on the Blue Nile. This multibillion-dollar behemoth is now fully operational, holding back vast volumes of water. With a population of more than 110 million and water scarcity already biting hard, the dam is a major national security issue because the Nile supplies nearly all of Egypt's freshwater.
The GERD's massive reservoir now gives Ethiopia control over the river's primary tributary. For over a decade, as the dam rose on the Ethiopian highlands, Cairo desperately pushed for a binding international agreement on its filling and operation, but those negotiations fell apart amid acrimony and accusations from both sides.
Today, the dam is a towering reality, a knee on Egypt's neck that potentially threatens millions. Egypt has repeatedly appealed to the UN Security Council, forged military alliances with Ethiopia's neighbours, and staunchly opposed Addis Ababa's ambitions for Red Sea access, in a bid to encircle its landlocked water rival.
However, the situation appeared to change again towards the end of December 2025, when Israel became the first member of the United Nations to recognise Somaliland, a breakaway province with a Red Sea coast. Israel wants maritime access within striking distance of the Yemen-based Houthis. Egypt is concerned that Israel will collaborate with Somaliland and Ethiopia, given that Ethiopia also seeks maritime access through Israel.
This stand-off is poised to dominate Egypt's foreign policy in the Horn of Africa through 2026 and beyond, with tensions already flaring over recent floods blamed on erratic water releases. If Ethiopia presses ahead with plans for additional dams on the Nile, it could become a full-blown regional crisis, testing the fragile balance of power along one of the world's most vital rivers.
Mediterranean gas
In in 2025, Egypt and Türkiye made dramatic strides towards full diplomatic normalisation after a decade of frosty relations based by clashing ideologies and rival claims over gas reserves in the Eastern Mediterranean. Today, the two countries increasingly find themselves on the same page, and have enjoyed recent high-level visits, joint naval drills, and a flurry of trade deals, pushing bilateral commerce towards a $15bn target.
This budding détente will be tested as early as 2026 over the Eastern Mediterranean. In early December 2025, at a Cairo summit, President Sisi and Libyan general Khalifa Haftar, who controls much of eastern and southern Libya, agreed to delineate maritime boundaries between Egypt and Libya. If signed in 2026, this would align with Egypt's prior maritime pacts with Cyprus, Greece, and Saudi Arabia, unlocking exclusive rights to explore and drill for gas in contested zones.
This comes up against Türkiye's controversial 2019 memorandum of understanding with Tripoli's then-government, which carved out expansive sea corridors, ignoring Greek islands and overlapping claims from Egypt and others. Cairo described that pact as illegal. Dealing with Haftar could now reignite old frictions with Ankara over energy exploration and naval posturing.
As Egypt treads a diplomatic tightrope—safeguarding its sovereign rights without torpedoing hard-won gains with Ankara—the outcome will likely redefine power dynamics in the Eastern Mediterranean for years to come, testing whether pragmatism can prevail over the lure of underwater treasures. From Gaza to chaos in Sudan to Ethiopia's new dam to the careful rebuilding of ties with Türkiye, Cairo has balanced risks while protecting core interests. The road ahead in 2026 alas looks no easier.