Alleviating Fuel Adulteration Practices in the Downstream Oil Sector in Senegal
The World Bank is supporting a number of initiatives to rationalize the downstream oil sector of Sub-Saharan African countries. Such initiatives include the phasing-out of leaded gasoline (part of the pollution reduction programs), the harmonizatio...
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Format: | ESMAP Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/09/6754154/alleviating-fuel-adulteration-practices-downstream-oil-sector-senegal http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17998 |
Summary: | The World Bank is supporting a number of
initiatives to rationalize the downstream oil sector of
Sub-Saharan African countries. Such initiatives include the
phasing-out of leaded gasoline (part of the pollution
reduction programs), the harmonization of fuels technical
specifications between countries in the same region, and the
programs to improve urban air quality. This report examines
ongoing visible malpractice and the lack of rigorous
monitoring and implementing of accepted petroleum product
standards in Sub-Saharan Africa in general, and especially
in West Africa. Since many countries in the Gulf of Guinea
are either supplied from Societe International de Raffinage
(SIR) in Cote D'Ivoire or from Societe Africaine de
Raffinage (SAR) in Senegal, and since Senegal serves its
domestic market as well as those of Gambia, Guinea Bissau,
Sierra Leone, Liberia, Mauritania, and Mali (and given the
tense situation in Cote D'Ivoire), the report looks at
the case of Senegal and SAR first, and then draws
preliminary lessons from there, for the sub-region. Along
with assessing the risk of malpractice in the downstream oil
industry in Senegal, the report takes stock of the current
processes and procedures to prevent, monitor, and punish
abuses; and proposes an adapted detailed action plan to
improve them. This work focuses on the automotive fuels and
the industrial diesel oil, excluding the fuel oils and
butane present on the Senegalese market. |
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