Ethiopia’s Fuel Crisis Deepens as Global Oil Shock Ripples Through Fragile Economy
In cities across Ethiopia, the fuel crisis has moved beyond abstraction and into the fabric of daily life.
From Addis Ababa to Hawassa and Bahir Dar, vehicles now queue for kilometres outside filling stations. Drivers sleep in their cars for days, often without securing a single litre. What was once a logistical inconvenience has hardened into a profound economic disruption, measured less in official data than in lost income and stalled livelihoods.
For many, the arithmetic of survival is no longer viable.
Abate Cheru, a ride-hailing driver in the capital, describes a profession pushed to the brink. Rising petrol prices, combined with hours spent in queues, have rendered his work increasingly unsustainable—particularly for those renting vehicles.
Public transport operators are under even greater strain. Filmon Tekle, a minibus driver, says he has already been forced to suspend operations after failing to access diesel for days. Like many others, he has turned to the parallel market—where fuel is available, but at punishing cost.
Across the country, informal fuel markets have become an essential, if deeply expensive, fallback. Prices there have surged far beyond official rates: petrol reportedly sells at roughly double the regulated price, while diesel can reach multiples higher. With the majority of filling stations in Addis Ababa running dry of diesel, reliance on these unofficial channels is accelerating.
The consequences are being felt far beyond transport.
Commuters report walking long distances as taxis disappear. Construction projects are slowing or halting altogether. Factories are scaling back output, while supply chains are increasingly strained. Some public institutions have shifted to remote working arrangements, and vehicle use is being tightly restricted.
What began as a supply disruption is now cascading through the broader economy.
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A Global Shock with Local Consequences
The immediate trigger lies far beyond Ethiopia’s borders.
Escalating tensions involving the United States, Israel and Iran earlier this year disrupted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, a corridor responsible for roughly a fifth of global oil shipments. Heightened security risks, rising insurance costs and rerouted tankers have combined to constrict supply.
For Ethiopia—almost entirely dependent on imported fuel—the effects have been swift and severe.
Shipments have been delayed or cancelled outright, with significant volumes failing to arrive. Officials report that diesel availability has been effectively halved in recent weeks, forcing emergency procurement at sharply elevated prices.
The surge in global oil costs has compounded the crisis. Import bills have risen dramatically, placing additional strain on Ethiopia’s already limited foreign exchange reserves.
Rationing, Subsidies and Mounting Pressure
In response, the government has imposed sweeping rationing measures.
Fuel distribution is now prioritised for essential sectors, including public transport, agriculture, healthcare logistics and security services. Sales outside designated categories have been restricted, while enforcement against hoarding and illicit trading has intensified.
A centralised command system has been established to oversee allocation, alongside broader austerity measures. Government offices have reduced travel, shifted to virtual meetings and curtailed fuel consumption. Citizens, meanwhile, are being urged to limit non-essential journeys.
Despite these constraints, the state continues to absorb a substantial share of the financial burden.
Fuel subsidies remain extensive, cushioning consumers from the full impact of global prices. However, this approach is placing increasing pressure on public finances. The gap between official prices and those on the parallel market continues to widen, exposing inefficiencies in distribution and leakage into informal channels.
Over time, the underlying trend has been unmistakable: purchasing power has eroded sharply, reflecting both global energy volatility and domestic economic adjustments.
Structural Vulnerabilities Exposed
While the current الأزمة has been accelerated by geopolitical conflict, its roots are deeper.
Ethiopia’s near-total reliance on imported fuel leaves it acutely exposed to external shocks. Chronic foreign exchange shortages, currency depreciation and gradual subsidy reforms have further heightened vulnerability.
At the same time, governance challenges within the fuel distribution system—ranging from inefficiencies to alleged corruption—have exacerbated supply constraints.
Economists warn that enforcement alone will not resolve these structural distortions.
The crisis also reflects a broader pattern identified in analyses by institutions such as The Economist: countries most exposed to energy shocks tend to share three characteristics—heavy import dependence, limited fiscal buffers and constrained capacity to sustain subsidies.
Ethiopia fits all three.
Economic Fallout Spreads
The impact is now rippling across multiple sectors.
Manufacturers report scaling back operations due to fuel shortages, while logistical bottlenecks are emerging as a critical constraint. Even where production continues, transporting goods across the country is becoming increasingly difficult.
New regulations—such as restrictions on storing or transporting extra fuel—have further complicated distribution, discouraging long-distance haulage and contributing to growing backlogs.
The result is rising inventory levels, slowing trade flows and early signs of inflation, particularly in food and essential goods.
Smaller businesses are adapting where possible, with some shifting to alternative fuels or sourcing petrol directly from retail stations. But such measures offer only partial relief.
Economists caution that price pressures are likely to intensify in the coming months as transport costs feed through the wider economy.
Searching for Stability
Authorities are pursuing a dual-track response: immediate crisis management alongside longer-term structural reform.
Emergency efforts include diversifying fuel suppliers, tightening oversight and promoting conservation. At the same time, strategic investments are being explored to strengthen resilience—among them expanded fuel storage capacity in Djibouti and closer integration with transport infrastructure.
There is also renewed emphasis on reducing dependence on imported النفط through alternative energy, including electric mobility and renewables.
For now, however, uncertainty persists.
The duration of geopolitical tensions affecting global oil routes remains unclear. Even if prices stabilise, supply disruptions could continue to reverberate through vulnerable economies.
For Ethiopia, the الأزمة has become more than a temporary shock.
It is a stress test—one that is exposing the limits of an economic model heavily reliant on imported energy, constrained reserves and fragile supply chains.
Restoring fuel flows is the immediate priority.
Ensuring resilience against the next shock may prove the far greater challenge.
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