The Mixed Blessings of Oil Boom for African Countries
From the Archives
Posted on November 13, 2007
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| In countries flush with oil wealth, the average citizen has yet to see an increased standard of living. Photo Credit: Cassandra Nelson/Mercy Corps |
Since the middle 1990s, several countries in Sub-Saharan Africa such as Nigeria, Angola, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea have experienced strong revenue growth from the petroleum industry. The new riches, however, come with a heavy toll. Rather than being directed to the countries' economic development and improvement of living standards for their citizens, it has been used almost exclusively for the enrichment of the countries' leaders.
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Since the middle 1990s, several countries in Sub-Saharan Africa such as Nigeria, Angola, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea have experienced strong revenue growth from the petroleum industry.
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As a consequence, most of the population remains poor and unprotected, as I was able to see in several visits to that continent. With over 4mn barrels of oil produced daily, Sub-Saharan Africa's production surpasses that of Iran, Venezuela and Mexico put together, and the region has the potential to become as important a crude oil resource as Russia or the Caspian Sea. The region has the additional advantage of being more politically stable than the Middle East, at least at this time. According to estimates from the National Intelligence Council in the United States, Sub-Saharan Africa could fill up to 25 percent of US fossil fuel needs in 2015, compared to 16 percent now.
In addition, the Gulf of Guinea, which extends from Nigeria to Angola, could become the first producer of deep water offshore oil in the world. One of the most significant discoveries of oil reserves has been in Equatorial Guinea, a former Spanish colony in West Africa. When oil was found in the country in 1996, Equatorial Guinea was one of the poorest countries in the world. Today, this small and sparsely populated country of 465,000 inhabitants has an offshore production of 350,000 barrels a day, making it the third largest Sub-Saharan producer of oil, behind Nigeria and Angola. According to the African Development Bank, a year after oil was found in the country the GDP went up 76 percent. What is most remarkable, however, is not the size of the increase in revenues, but how little of it has been shared by the population, either directly or in improved health and social services. At the same time, while oil production has continually increased, production of traditional exports such as coffee and cacao has declined dramatically.
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Angola's president, José Eduardo dos Santos, has become one of the world's 50 richest people while most of Angola's population lives in misery and wide sectors of the population are ravaged by the HIV/Aids pandemic.
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Nigerian general Muhammadu Buhari has stated: "Corruption has eaten away at our industries and society generally."
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The main responsibility in managing oil resources well lies with African leaders. But other important actors are foreign oil companies, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, and the US and other governments. They could more forcefully demand increased transparency from African governments.
Oil revenues have the potential of transforming for the better the lives of millions of Africans condemned otherwise to live in poverty. It is estimated that oil revenues will bring to Africa 10 times the amount industrialized nations give each year in aid. That the profits are not used to improve people's lives is a severe indictment of African leaders themselves. It is mainly up to them to make of the oil boom in their countries a blessing or a curse.
Contributed by Dr Cesar Chelala, an international public health consultant and award-winning writer on human rights issues. Reprinted with permission from Gulf Times.
To read another Global Envision article about the mismanagement of oil resources in Africa, see Stopping the Flow of Stolen Resources.
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