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Subscriber

Persistent blackouts, rising tensions in poorer neighbourhoods and disillusionment among the professional classes are adding to political pressures on President Wade and his family. A speedy breakthrough in installing new generation capacity and improved T&D would considerably ease tensions, writes Jon Marks in Dakar

Senegal
Subscriber

With a $181m deal, one of the largest local currency financings in an African emerging market is complete, writes Kevin Godier

Botswana
Subscriber

After a trial shrouded in secrecy, the criminal court in Oran has finally handed down sentences on disgraced Sonatrach president director-general Mohammed Meziane, ex-interim PDG and downstream vice president Abdelhafid Feghouli and three co-defendants, who were accused of misappropriating public funds and short-circuiting the tender process by awarding contracts on a gré-à-gré (directly negotiated) basis.

Algeria
Subscriber

As the Jonathan administration settles in, GE is among the major players looking to build an even bigger business on the back of Abuja’s commitment to increased electricity supply and an acceleration of stalled IPPs

Nigeria
Free

A wave of strikes, adding to the localised protests across the country over social and economic issues, says much about the current mood in a North African state that has so far resisted the galvanic change that marked the early months of the Arab Spring.

Algeria
Subscriber

Cameroon has tapped Chinese expertise and funding for two key dam projects as part of plans to triple electricity output. The Electricity Development Corporation (EDC) announced on 9 May that the construction contract for the key Lom Pangar dam had been awarded to China International Water and Electric Corporation, a subsidiary of China Three Gorges Corporation.

Cameroon
Issue 209 - 21 May 2011

BG weathers North African unrest

Subscriber

The revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia during the first part of the year affected the company’s gas production in both countries, but operations are returning to normal. Fears that a week-long blockade of BG Group’s offices in the town of Nakta could lead to a shutdown of its Tunisia operations have receded after the company committed to employing more local staff and made other concessions.

Libya
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A range of energy industry players and financiers are waiting to see if the president can create sufficient national consensus to provide the investment opportunities promised by CdI’s natural resource base and reconstruction needs, writes Thalia Griffiths

Côte d'Ivoire
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Egypt’s new leaders are keen to renegotiate export contracts with Israel and Jordan, which are accused of being sold gas at preferential prices. Court hearings took place in 2009 to challenge the Israeli deal in particular (AE 172/21). Prime minister Essam Sharaf said in April he hoped to boost Egypt’s income from gas exports by $3bn-4bn. Domestic energy shortages have also made the deals unpopular, and there is a de facto moratorium on new export projects.

Egypt
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Jeddah-based Islamic Corporation for the Insurance of Investment and Export Credit (ICIEC) has told African Energy that non-payment cover involving power projects in Sudan had been a major focus for the organisation.

Sudan
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National Oil Corporation chairman Shukri Ghanem appears to have defected to the opposition, taking with him vital intelligence on the regime's fuel supplies, in a major blow to Muammar Qadhafi's hopes of clinging to power, writes John Hamilton

Tunisia
Issue 208 - 07 May 2011

Updated law planned

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The government is planning to revise the country’s oil law, with special emphasis on gas and pipeline regulations and especially cross-border provisions, vital for a landlocked state.

Mali
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The ‘accidental president’ Goodluck Ebele Azikiwe Jonathan was elected by an overwhelming majority in the 16 April presidential election, signalling four more years of his agenda to tackle Nigeria’s crippling lack of power supply and reform the oil and gas industry.

Nigeria
Subscriber

The development of renewable energy, especially off-grid rural electrification schemes, is a major thrust of the financing facility’s latest projects, writes François Misser in Brussels

Ghana | Congo Brazzaville | Burkina Faso | Mali
Subscriber

The cost of the Libyan conflict is becoming ever more apparent for construction and engineering companies, with the threat that under-insured businesses may be landed with potentially catastrophic losses if they forfeit on-demand contract bonds.

Libya