Difference between revisions of "Fuel Prices Niger"

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{{Fuel Price Factsheet
 
{{Fuel Price Factsheet
 
|Fuel Price Country=Niger
 
|Fuel Price Country=Niger
|Fuel Pricing Policies="Prices have been uniform throughout the country since Aug 2001. Beginning in Jan 2012, gasoline and diesel prices are set by a ministerial decree. Prices were adjusted once in 2009 and 2010, and four times in 2011. In Jan 2012, prices of all fuels except kerosene were lowered, and have not been adjusted since. Protests against the cost of living broke out in Dec 2011 in Zinder, after the opening of the country’s first refinery there did not sufficiently reduce fuel prices. An energy fund, created in 1994, has taken a few francs a liter from gasoline and diesel and cross-subsidized LPG. Fuel subsidies amounted to US$29 million in 2009 (0.5% of GDP), US$61 million in 2010 (1.1% of GDP), and US$70 million in 2011 (1.2% of GDP). With the start-up of oil production and refinery operation in 2011, explicit fuel price subsidies were eliminated in 2012. SONIDEP (Nigerien Petroleum Products Company) posts current and historical prices going back to 2001 on its Web site."
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|Fuel Pricing Policies="Pricing policy: Prices have been uniform throughout the country since Aug 2001. Beginning in Jan 2012, gasoline and diesel prices are set by a ministerial decree. Prices were adjusted once in 2009 and 2010, and four times in 2011. In Jan 2012, prices of all fuels except kerosene were lowered, and were not adjusted for the rest of the year. In Jan 2013, the prices of gasoline and diesel were lowered, while kerosene and LPG prices did not change. An energy fund, created in 1994, has taken a few francs a liter from gasoline and diesel and cross-subsidized LPG. Fuel subsidies amounted to US$29 million in 2009 (0.5% of GDP), US$61 million in 2010 (1.1% of GDP), and US$70 million in 2011 (1.2% of GDP). With the start-up of oil production and refinery operation in 2011, explicit fuel price subsidies were eliminated in 2012 (source IMF).
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Protests: The start-up of the refinery in Nov 2011 raised expectations about dramatic reductions in the prices of petroleum products. When the reductions did not occur, protests broke out against the high cost of living and turned violent in Dec 2011. Government in Jan 2012 in response increased civil service pay by 5–10% and reduced electricity tariffs by 25% and water by 5%.
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Information: SONIDEP (Nigerien Petroleum Products Company) posts current and historical prices going back to 2001 on its Web site."
  
 
(Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.)
 
(Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.)
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|Fuel Price Factsheet Source Link=http://www.sonidep.net/
 
|Fuel Price Factsheet Source Link=http://www.sonidep.net/
 
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[[Category:Niger]]

Latest revision as of 13:02, 23 September 2014

Part of: GIZ International Fuel Price database
Also see: Niger Energy Situation

Fuel Pricing Policies

Local Currency: FCFA
Exchange Rate: 472.9


(2010/11/17)

Last Update:

"Pricing policy: Prices have been uniform throughout the country since Aug 2001. Beginning in Jan 2012, gasoline and diesel prices are set by a ministerial decree. Prices were adjusted once in 2009 and 2010, and four times in 2011. In Jan 2012, prices of all fuels except kerosene were lowered, and were not adjusted for the rest of the year. In Jan 2013, the prices of gasoline and diesel were lowered, while kerosene and LPG prices did not change. An energy fund, created in 1994, has taken a few francs a liter from gasoline and diesel and cross-subsidized LPG. Fuel subsidies amounted to US$29 million in 2009 (0.5% of GDP), US$61 million in 2010 (1.1% of GDP), and US$70 million in 2011 (1.2% of GDP). With the start-up of oil production and refinery operation in 2011, explicit fuel price subsidies were eliminated in 2012 (source IMF). Protests: The start-up of the refinery in Nov 2011 raised expectations about dramatic reductions in the prices of petroleum products. When the reductions did not occur, protests broke out against the high cost of living and turned violent in Dec 2011. Government in Jan 2012 in response increased civil service pay by 5–10% and reduced electricity tariffs by 25% and water by 5%.

Information: SONIDEP (Nigerien Petroleum Products Company) posts current and historical prices going back to 2001 on its Web site."

(Source: Kojima, Masami. (2013, forthcoming). “Petroleum product pricing and complementary policies:Experience of 65 developing countries since 2009.” Washington DC: World Bank.)

Fuel Prices and Trends

Gasoline 95 Octane Diesel
in USD*

in Local Currency

* benchmark lines: green=US price; grey=price in Spain; red=price of Crude Oil



Fuel Price Composition

Price composition.



No information available.



At a Glance

Regulation-Price-Matrix
Transparency of
Price Composition
Transparency of Pricing
Mechanism / Monitoring
IFPDB matrix background.png
IFPDB matrix point.png
IFPDB trafficlight red.png IFPDB trafficlight explanation.png IFPDB trafficlight red.png



Sources to the Public

Type of Information Web-Link / Source
Pump prices and margins http://www.sonidep.net/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=62&Itemid=61 (Historic prices 2001 - 2013, monthly data)
Pump prices and margins http://www.sonidep.net/


Contact

Please find more information on GIZ International Fuel Price Database and http://www.giz.de/fuelprices

This is a living document. If you have any comments or suggestions, please feel free to contact us: Armin.Wagner@giz.de