
Africa’s energy producers are emerging as unexpected long-term beneficiaries of the Middle East conflict, according to oil analysts.
Angola, Mozambique, and Nigeria are among nations increasingly viewed by European and Asian buyers as lower-risk alternatives to disrupted supplies: With the Strait of Hormuz and Red Sea now high-risk routes, African volumes carry lower insurance premiums and more predictable delivery times — structural advantages that could reshape long-term supply contracts.
Africa’s liquefied natural gas sector stands to gain most; export capacity is projected to more than double by 2040, according to the African Energy Chamber. The crisis could also accelerate long-delayed projects, including the Trans-Saharan pipeline designed to carry Nigerian gas through Niger and Algeria to Europe, which has been beset by safety and security concerns in the Sahel region.
Horizon Engage risk analyst Clementine Wallop warned, however, that while Africa was a “logical place to look,” the risks some of these projects have faced — security, political, or logistical in nature — “show that this is not a quick fix.”
Potential gains for producer nations are nevertheless cold comfort for millions of ordinary Africans: The conflict has sent Brent crude surging more than 50% to around $110 a barrel, and since most African countries are net importers of refined oil products, the price shock has been swift and severe.
latest_posts
- 1
Massive supernova explosion may have created a binary black hole - 2
Taylor Swift's 'The End of an Era' docuseries: Everything you need to know, plus how to watch for less - 3
Instructions to Augment the Presentation of Your Kona SUV - 4
What's The Friendliest City In The United Kingdom? - 5
Distributed storage Answers for Information Reinforcement
The Iran war’s energy security legacy
Israel reports killing another senior Iranian oil official
Hezbollah claims right to respond to killing of top commander
As cases of a rare, deadly infection rise, doctors worry fewer teens will get vaccinated
When darkness shines: How dark stars could illuminate the early universe
Comet MAPS faces a make-or-break moment as it dives toward the sun on April 4 — could it shine in the daytime sky?
6 Well known Nissan Vehicles in the U.S.
Sources: IDF does not actually know how many ballistic missiles Iran has left
UK, Canada, Germany, others condemn Israel's West Bank settlement plan













