New AfDB study on energy reform in Africa uses Nigeria as case study

8 March 2012

African Development Bank - March 7, 2012

The cost to the Nigerian government of its fuel subsidy shot up by almost five times to USD 9.3 billion between 2006 and 2011, and accounted for 30 percent of all federal expenditure – a statistic quoted a new study on reforming the energy sector in Africa by the African Development Bank.

The study, published by the AfDB’s Chief Economist department, uses the case study of Nigeria for lessons in how to carry out such an energy reform program, particularly with regard to cutting or eliminating fuel subsidies while avoiding or minimising adverse effects such as supply-shock inflation and social unrest.

It notes that after the Nigerian authorities eliminated the fuel subsidy in January 2011, fuel prices more than doubled and the country suffered eight days of national strikes.

The study recommends a broad-based approach to energy reform in Africa.  It maintains ‘the key message is that a holistic approach to liberalizing the energy sector is needed and removing fuel subsidies is just one element of a broader reform agenda.’

Read more...


Category: Energy

Subscribe to our Newsletter

This week's must-sees

Interviews, article, discussions, news of the week

Each Friday, at 8PM (Paris GMT), the Infrastructure Consortium for Africa (ICA) selects for you the moments you should not miss

To subscribe: p.wolmer@afdb.org

Subscribe now

You are currently offline. Some pages or content may fail to load.