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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
Business
Khartoum - Asharq Al-Awsat

Sudan Raises Electricity Prices, Effective Immediately

Protesters hold flags and chant slogans as they march against the Sudanese military's recent seizure of power and ousting of the civilian government, in the streets of the capital Khartoum, Sudan October 30, 2021. (Reuters)

Sudan’s government increased prices for electricity, one of the country’s few still-subsidized commodities, as part of an ongoing economic reforms package, the country’s acting energy minister told Reuters.

The price changes, effective immediately, entail a sharp spike in prices for agricultural consumption from up to 1.6 pounds per kilowatt to nine pounds per kilowatt and large increases for domestic consumption as well.

“It is difficult for the government to provide the subsidy in the old way under current circumstances,” said acting energy minister Mohamed Abdallah, adding that the government was considering investment projects in solar and wind power but faced difficulty due to the subsidy.

Sudan’s electrical grid suffers from decades of neglect and difficulty paying for fuel and spare parts, leading to extensive power cuts during the hottest months of the year.

In 2020, Sudan removed subsidies on fuel and greatly reduced subsidies on wheat as part of International Monetary Fund (IMF)-monitored reforms.

Reforming the electricity subsidy is also a part of the reforms, which Sudan continues to pursue despite a military takeover in October that put a pause on the country’s debt relief efforts.

The new price changes would mean that the government reduced its subsidy on average to 69% from 95%, as part of a three-year program to remove the subsidy, Abdallah said. He pointed that electricity production would cost $2.4 billion in total this year.

The government maintained higher subsidy rates for lower consumption tiers in order to not burden lower-income households, he said.

Prices had first been raised earlier this month, but the country’s Sovereign Council had suspended the move following protests in the country’s Northern State.

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