Geography

Lake Malawi is between 560 kilometres (350 mi)[1] and 580 kilometres (360 mi) long, and about 75 kilometres (47 mi) wide at its widest point. The lake has a total surface area of about 29,600 square kilometres (11,400 sq mi). The lake is 706 m (2,316 ft) at its deepest point, located in a major depression in the north-central part.  Another smaller depression in the far north reaches a depth of 528 m (1,732 ft).  The southern half of the lake is shallower; less than 400 m (1,300 ft) in the south-central part and less than 200 m (660 ft) in the far south.

 

The lake has shorelines on western Mozambique, eastern Malawi, and southern Tanzania. The largest river flowing into it is the Ruhuhu River, and there is an outlet at its southern end, the Shire River, a tributary that flows into the Zambezi River in Mozambique.  Evaporation accounts for more than 80% of the water loss from the lake, considerably more than the outflowing Shire River. The outflows from Lake Malawi into the Shire River are vital for the economy as the water resources support hydropower, irrigation and downstream biodiversity. 

 

The lake is about 350 kilometres (220 mi) southeast of Lake Tanganyika, another of the great lakes of the East African Rift. 

The Lake Malawi National Park is located at the southern end of the lake.

Borders

The partition of the lake’s surface area between Malawi and Tanzania is under dispute. Tanzania claims that the international border runs through the middle of the lake.  On the other hand, Malawi claims the whole of the surface of this lake that is not in Mozambique, including the waters that are next to the shoreline of Tanzania.  Both sides cite the Heligoland Treaty of 1890 between Great Britain and Germany concerning the border. The wrangle in this dispute occurred when the British colonial government, just after they had captured Tanganyika from Germany, placed all of the waters of the lake under a single jurisdiction, that of the territory of Nyasaland, without a separate administration for the Tanganyikan portion of the surface. Later in colonial times, two jurisdictions were established.

 

The dispute came to a head in 1967 when Tanzania officially protested to Malawi; however nothing was settled.  Occasional flare-ups of conflict occurred during the 1990s and in the 21st century.  In 2012, Malawi’s oil exploration initiative brought the issue to the fore, with Tanzania demanding that exploration cease until the dispute was settled.

 

Malawi–Mozambique border

In 1954, an agreement was signed between the British and the Portuguese making the middle of the lake their boundary with the exception of Chizumulu Island and Likoma Island, which were kept by the British and are now part of Malawi.[32]

 

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