Africa didn’t cause this energy crisis – but it often pays the highest price
7 min read
History offers a familiar lesson: When global energy markets are disrupted, Africa often bears a disproportionate share of the consequences.
The continent is rarely the source of the crisis. Yet, it often finds itself on the front line of the fallout. Higher transport costs, inflation, pressure on foreign-exchange reserves and fiscal strain can arrive quickly, particularly in fuel-importing economies. Unlike larger consuming nations, many African countries have fewer tools available when global energy markets are disrupted.
That reality is being tested once again.
More than 10 weeks into the Iran conflict, global energy markets remain under severe pressure. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), disruptions have affected oil volumes equivalent to roughly 14% of global daily demand. Even after emergency measures and alternative supply routes were activated, the market remains significantly undersupplied. The result is one of the most severe energy market disruptions in recent years.
For Africa, this is not simply an oil story. It is an economic one. Fuel powers transport networks, agriculture, industry and trade. When energy markets tighten, the effects spread well beyond the forecourt. They are felt in basic goods, government budgets, business costs and economic growth.
The real story is not crude oil
Much attention has focused on oil prices. Yet, the bigger challenge facing many African economies today is access to supply.
The real pressure is coming from freight, logistics and the growing competition for available cargoes.
As shipping routes have lengthened and security risks have increased, tanker rates on key fuel routes have surged. For import-dependent markets, that means the delivered cost of fuel can rise sharply even when benchmark crude prices appear relatively stable.
The challenge is no longer just the price of oil. It is the cumulative impact of tighter fuel supplies, higher transport costs and a market operating with less room for error.
The impact is already being felt. In many African markets, diesel and gasoline prices rose by between 30% and 50% between April and May.
For Africa, these pressures are amplified by import dependence and currency weakness. In a tighter market, securing supply becomes not only a question of price but of competitiveness.
This is not a temporary disruption
One assumption should be treated with caution: that this crisis will soon pass.
Global inventories have been drawn down sharply, with the IEA estimating stock declines of almost 250 million barrels over a two-month period earlier this year. Even as some disrupted production returns, the path back to normality is unlikely to be immediate.
Oil production cannot simply be switched back on overnight. Production, refining and supply chains take time to recover, while shipping markets must regain confidence before trade flows fully normalise. These processes are measured in months, not weeks.
This increasingly looks like a higher-for-longer environment rather than a short-lived price spike.
That distinction matters. Temporary disruptions can often be managed through emergency measures. Prolonged disruptions require something different: sustained policy responsiveness, flexible pricing mechanisms and an unwavering focus on supply security.
African governments have responded decisively
The encouraging story is that many African governments have recognised the challenge early.
Across several markets, policymakers have adjusted pricing frameworks, accelerated approvals and introduced temporary measures to support fuel availability. Those actions have helped avoid the shortages that often accompany periods of global market stress.
That deserves recognition.
No government wants to raise fuel prices. The impact is felt immediately by households, businesses and transport operators, and the political consequences can be significant.
Yet, governments are operating with limited room for manoeuvre. Many are already dealing with pressure on public finances and foreign exchange reserves, while trying to ensure fuel remains available and affordable.
There are no perfect solutions. But when disruptions persist, supply security becomes increasingly important.
Resilience is about flexibility, not self-sufficiency
The events of recent months have reinforced an important point: No country can completely avoid the effects of a global energy shock. The difference lies in how well it is prepared to respond.
That means investing in strategic storage, strengthening import infrastructure, improving logistics networks and developing more efficient regional supply corridors. It also means maintaining diversified sources of supply. Countries that rely too heavily on a single region, supplier or trade route are inherently more exposed when disruptions occur.
Governments can also consider fuel-saving initiatives that have proven effective during previous energy shocks, including greater use of public transport, car-pooling initiatives, remote-working arrangements and targeted energy-efficiency campaigns. While no single measure is transformative, together they can reduce fuel consumption and ease pressure on foreign-exchange reserves.
The objective should not be to isolate Africa from global energy markets. It should be to make African economies more resilient when those markets become volatile.
A test of leadership
The response to this crisis has also sent an important signal to investors: Many African governments have demonstrated a willingness to act decisively when supply security is at stake.
The challenge now is to sustain it.
Africa has successfully navigated the first phase of this disruption. Markets have remained supplied. Economies have continued to function. The worst outcomes have largely been avoided.
But resilience is not built during calm periods. It is built during moments like this.
The months ahead will require the same pragmatism and responsiveness that many governments have already demonstrated. The immediate task is to keep fuel flowing; the longer term challenge is to build more resilient energy systems.
Africa did not create this crisis, but the continent will help define how emerging economies respond to it. The lesson is clear: Resilience is not about avoiding global shocks. It is about adapting to them quickly, managing their consequences wisely and emerging better prepared for the next one.
Ben Ouattara
Head: Africa
