The Scholarship Without Borders Journal
Abstract
This article used a qualitative literature-based transformation methodology to examine governance and leadership in the shared use of the transboundary water of the River Nile Basin. This is important because the basin is conflict-ridden yet yearns for development, driven by natural resource discoveries and the utilization of the River Nile. Appropriate governance and leadership, along with cooperation, are required for development to be achieved. The article examines the increased competition over the exploitation of natural resources, driven by development objectives, pressured by population growth, and fueled by the need for hydroelectric generation, oil and gas extraction, and mining by international companies. It examines the consequences of all these for the environment, climate change, and regional security. This dynamic has led to national resource nationalism, contributing to the escalation of political tensions within the River Nile Basin. The paper further examines in-country conflicts, mainly within communities and between inter-agencies in the River Nile Basin, as well as tensions and conflicts between the riparian states of the River Nile.
The article reviews Nile water governance from colonial-era agreements (1927) and the Bilateral Agreement between Sudan and Egypt (1959) to the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI, 1999), an initiative by upstream states to govern the Nile Water, and its Cooperative Framework Agreement (CFA, 2010). The article demonstrates that weak enforcement of international rules, fragmented legal regimes, asymmetric power relations, and corporate influence undermine cooperative resource governance. The article concludes that demand for regional leadership, strengthened multilateral legal mechanisms, enforceable environmental safeguards, and benefit-sharing frameworks are essential to preventing future conflict and ensuring sustainable management of shared natural resources in the River Nile Basin.
Recommended Citation
Okumu, Reagan Ronald
(2026)
"Natural Resources Conflict in the Nile River Basin: Natural Resource Nationalism, Environmental Governance, and Transboundary Security.,"
The Scholarship Without Borders Journal: Vol. 4:
Iss.
2, Article 8.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57229/2834-2267.1086
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/swbj/vol4/iss2/8