Namibia intervenes to protect consumers as fuel prices rise


Namibia’s government will temporarily reduce fuel levies by 50% for at least three months until the end of June in ​a bid to protect consumers from higher pump prices as ‌the United States (US)-Israeli war with Iran continues, the energy minister said this Friday.

The decision by the southern African country, which is wholly dependent on imports of refined petroleum ​products, is the latest response by an African country to the ​Middle East crisis that has strangled around 20% of ⁠the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas exports that transit via ​the Strait of Hormuz.

“This measure is necessitated due to the high price ​volatility of petroleum products, which resulted from the ongoing geopolitical tensions in the Middle East,” Modestus Amutse, Namibia’s Energy Minister, said at a media briefing.

He said ​the government will make use of its National Energy Fund to ​help stabilise fuel price volatility from April 1 to the end of June, with ‌April’s ⁠under-recovery amounting to some 500 million Namibian Dollars ($29 million).

“The ⁠objective is to smooth price volatility and ensure stability in domestic fuel prices,” he said.

Namibia, a global ​oil and gas exploration hot spot which hopes to ​produce its ⁠first oil by 2030, consumes approximately 100 million litres of petrol and diesel each month.

Amutse emphasised that the country’s fuel stocks are adequate ⁠to meet ​national demand for one to two ​months, and urged citizens not to illegally hoard fuel or engage in panic buying.