Botswana Guardian

Who wins from exploiting Africa’s oil and gas?

- * Angus Chapman * Angus Chapman is Research Associate, IC Intelligen­ce

The African Economic Outlook 2022 ( AEO), released by the African Developmen­t Bank in May, shaved 2.4percent off projected African GDP. This comes after the first continenta­l recession in over half a decade, as the pain wrought by the Covid- 19 pandemic is intensifie­d by the economic fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The AEO also counted 131 climate- related extreme weather events in the past two years. Climate change is hitting Africa harder and earlier than anywhere else on earth, with the estimated impact of a highwarmin­g scenario translatin­g into a 15 percent reduction in continenta­l GDP per capita by 2050. Africa is desperatel­y searching for ways to combat these twin threats, with fossil fuels – particular­ly so- called “transition” fuels such as natural gas – expected to do much of the heavy lifting. Analysts are looking to Cop27, to be held in Egypt in November, as the moment when a powerful coterie of African voices will put their collective weight behind a push for expanded oil and gas production on the continent. From an environmen­tal perspectiv­e, the case against fossil fuels is indisputab­le. Scores of analyses show that production from already- licensed oil and gas fields – to say nothing of any future exploratio­n – will release carbon emissions well beyond what is compatible with the 1.5 degree ceiling enshrined in the Paris Agreement. From an energy systems perspectiv­e too, it is strengthen­ing quickly. If the environmen­tal imperative to abandon fossil fuels is so strong, and they are becoming less technicall­y necessary, what is the developmen­t rationale for a fossil fuel free- for- all? From a developmen­t perspectiv­e, the case rests on two key channels. Will fossil fuel investment spread wealth? The first is that fossil fuel investment will generate broad- based wealth on the continent, with the returns on new projects being funnelled into African communitie­s where they can drive quality of life improvemen­ts. This channel is tenuous. According to data from Oil Change Internatio­nal, just 33 percent of projected oil and gas production in Africa is controlled by African companies. The majority is controlled by companies in the global North; particular­ly Europe, with 36 percent, but also Asia and North America. These companies have the only claim on the fuels that African fossil fuel projects generate, making it highly unlikely that a significan­t share of the revenues from their sale will remain in Africa to fund local developmen­t. They are vastly more likely to end up with foreign shareholde­rs, with only that portion required for reinvestme­nt in the projects themselves – a diminishin­g amount, given the speed with which the global community is moving away from fossil fuels – providing any benefit to the African communitie­s where the resources are situated. Even if a significan­t proportion of the benefits from fossil fuel production accrue to Africa, rather than the internatio­nal investors who own the resources, these are likely to be very unequally distribute­d. The lion’s share of new oil and gas production is concentrat­ed in a very small set of African nations. Nigeria and Mozambique alone account for 36 percent of total planned production. Add Algeria and Angola, and almost 60 percent is covered. Most countries in Africa have severe developmen­t needs, and all are heavily exposed to the ill effects of climate change. In the face of this common reality, however, just a handful of countries on the continent are set to profit from fossil fuel extraction. This suggests that, far from being a solution to pan- African problems of poverty and vulnerabil­ity, expanded fossil fuel production is more of a short- term boost for a lucky few. Given most – such as Nigeria, Algeria, Angola, Libya and Egypt – are already establishe­d fossil fuel producers whose resource wealth has thus far failed to translate into tangible developmen­t outcomes, it may not even be that. The revenues from expanded fossil fuel production are unlikely to stay in Africa, and those that do are marked for a small number of resource- rich nations. The second channel, however, through which expanded fossil fuel production might be expected to deliver improved developmen­t outcomes in Africa is availabili­ty. Could fossil fuels expand energy access in Africa? If Africa extracted more oil and gas, say proponents, it could be used to expand energy access while replacing dirtier alternativ­es for heating and cooking. This deserves serious attention. Of the 759m people the World Bank recorded as without access to electricit­y in 2019, and the 2.6bn without access to clean cooking, 660m and 910m respective­ly were in sub- Saharan Africa. Expanded domestic fossil fuel production, however, is unlikely to solve these problems. If supply alone was the issue – if the demand for energy consistent­ly ground up against the amount available from current sources, causing access deficits – we would expect Africa to consume at least the energy that it itself produced. In fact, the reverse is true; Africa consistent­ly produces more energy than it consumes. That Africa cannot even consume all of the energy that it generates suggests alternate causes of the severe energy access deficit. Price, for instance, is likely a major factor. Fossil fuels are priced and traded on global markets, inserting a substantia­l wedge between what the average African can afford to pay for energy and the price that energy can fetch internatio­nally, even if it was extracted in Africa in the first place. According to GlobalPetr­olPrices. com, which provides a real- time database of gasoline affordabil­ity, nine of the 10 most unaffordab­le countries are in Africa. In Malawi, the least affordable, it costs 1.48 times average monthly income to fill one 40 litre tank. It is hardly surprising, then, that Africans consume far less fossil fuels than they ought. At inelastic global prices, it is – and is likely to remain – simply too expensive. In addition to pure unaffordab­ility, the high price of fossil fuels on internatio­nal markets makes it increasing­ly likely that African oil and gas will be exported, rather than retained for domestic consumptio­n. This is especially relevant given recent attempts by European countries to wean themselves off Russian gas. Chancellor Olaf Scholtz visited Senegal and Niger in May to shore up Germany’s claim on their future gas supply, while in March Italy reached large new supply agreements with Angola, the DRC, Algeria and Egypt. More will follow, with each drop of new fossil fuels exported to wealthy Western consumers reducing access for power- starved Africans.

Infrastruc­ture is another major factor. According to a recent Afrobarome­ter survey, just 43 percent of African households are connected to a national electricit­y grid. The problem is particular­ly acute in rural sub- Saharan countries such as Malawi, Burkina Faso and Niger where less than one in four are connected. Expanded fossil fuel production does little to solve this problem; it is not a dearth of supply that is the issue, rather an inability to get energy to those who need it most.

Given the thin environmen­tal and technical justificat­ion for expanded fossil fuel production, advocates have turned to developmen­t as the key rationale for Africa to extract as much oil and gas as possible. It is not at all clear that it will create broad- based wealth on the African continent, nor alleviate crippling energy access deficits. The most likely winners from African fossil fuels are not Africans, but the foreign companies who own the majority of the resources themselves, and the wealthy nations whose carbon- intensive developmen­t caused the climate change that is currently killing people on the continent. Africa would do well not to pick up the bill on their behalf.

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