Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
08ASMARA300
2008-06-04 18:34:00
CONFIDENTIAL//NOFORN
Embassy Asmara
Cable title:  

ERITREA - NO FUEL BY JULY?

Tags:  ECON PGOV PREL ENRG PINR ASEC ER 
pdf how-to read a cable
R 041834Z JUN 08
FM AMEMBASSY ASMARA
TO SECSTATE WASHDC 9716
INFO IGAD COLLECTIVE
IRAN COLLECTIVE
AMEMBASSY KUWAIT 
AMEMBASSY RIYADH 
SECDEF WASHDC
JICCENT MACDILL AFB FL
CJTF-HOA J2X CAMP LEMONIER DJ
DIA WASHDC
CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL
CIA WASHDC
C O N F I D E N T I A L ASMARA 000300 

NOFORN
SIPDIS

STATE FOR AF/EX, AF/E AND INR
LONDON AND PARIS FOR AFRICA WATCHERS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/04/2018
TAGS: ECON PGOV PREL ENRG PINR ASEC ER
SUBJECT: ERITREA - NO FUEL BY JULY?

REF: A. ASMARA 92 B. ASMARA 258

Classified By: Ambassador Ronald K. McMullen for Reason 1.4 (d)

C O N F I D E N T I A L ASMARA 000300

NOFORN
SIPDIS

STATE FOR AF/EX, AF/E AND INR
LONDON AND PARIS FOR AFRICA WATCHERS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 06/04/2018
TAGS: ECON PGOV PREL ENRG PINR ASEC ER
SUBJECT: ERITREA - NO FUEL BY JULY?

REF: A. ASMARA 92 B. ASMARA 258

Classified By: Ambassador Ronald K. McMullen for Reason 1.4 (d)


1. (C/NF) Summary: Eritrea has fuel reserves of only one
month, and poor prospects for purchasing more, according to
Total's Managing Director in Eritrea. Eritrea's Kuwaiti
suppliers reportedly have not been paid since December 2007,
and will not supply more fuel until the government makes
payment, which it lacks the hard currency to do. Lack of
fuel could potentially lead to domestic unrest and impact
Post operations. End Summary.

THE GSE OVERCHARGES ITS GAS CREDIT CARD
--------------


2. (C/NF) Total's Managing Director in Eritrea, Mohammed
Gbepo (protect),told Emboff on June 2 that Eritrea last
received fuel imports approximately 6 months ago. According
to Gbepo, the Kuwaiti company refused to provide additional
fuel until paid in full for the last shipment. Based on
current rates of consumption, Gbepo believes Eritrea's
remaining fuel stocks will last, at best, only about one
month. The supplier, an unnamed Kuwaiti company, provided
$60 million of fuel, including diesel, with a 90-day grace
period before payment was due. The Government of the State
of Eritrea (GSE) has yet to make payment. The Petroleum
Corporation of Eritrea (PCE) controls all Eritrean fuel
imports, and is completely owned by Eritrea's sole political
party, the People's Front for Democracy and Justice (PFDJ).


3. (C/NF) The head of the Commercial Bank of Eritrea recently
told Gbepo that Eritrea's hard currency reserves were fully
depleted, noting the GSE would have trouble scraping together
even $1 million, let alone $60 million to make payment.

JET FUEL CONVERTED TO COOKING GAS
--------------


4. (C/NF) Gbepo said domestic kerosene supplies, used
extensively for cooking, are nearly depleted. To meet
domestic demand, Gbepo noted that Asmara International
Airport's remaining jet fuel is being converted to kerosene,

and jets are no longer allowed to refuel in Asmara. Eritrean
Airlines and Nasair are now refueling in Dubai and Nairobi,
and Egypt Air cut the number of passengers to sixty on its
Cairo-Asmara-Cairo flight, in order to make the round trip
without refueling. Gbepo estimates that even with this
conversion, Eritrea has - at most - only one and one-half
months of additional kerosene supplies.

ERITREA'S STRATEGIC RESERVE
--------------


5. (C/NF) Gpebo noted that the GSE maintains underground fuel
stocks located off of the Massawa road which have yet to be
tapped. He estimates total capacity of these stocks at
around 20 million liters, but he doubts that the tanks are
topped off.


6. (C/NF) According to Gbepo, all of Eritrea's official fuel
imports are placed in Total's storage units, since the PCE
does not have its own facilities. When the PCE allocates
fuel, Total is told the quantity and its destination. This
gives Total inside information on Eritrea's official fuel
imports and utilization.

POST COMMENT AND ANALYSIS
--------------


7. (C/NF) Gbepo painted a very bleak picture of Eritrea's
near-term fuel shortages, information that tracks with
anecdotal reports from other Post sources. In light of his
inside information, Post believes the GSE may well have known
in December 2007 it would be unable to pay for the Kuwaiti
fuel purchase, and therefore instituted the draconian
austerity measures, such as cutting off fuel to UN agencies
and NGOs to stretch the fuel supply as long as possible.

(Note: UN representatives informed Emboffs they must
consider closing Eritrean operations by the first week of
August if the GSE does not resume diesel deliveries. End
Note.)


8. (C/NF) The GSE's economic decision-making continues to
defy logic. Diesel fuel, when provided, is rationed,
subsidized, and sold in Nakfa even to foreign missions and
international organizations. A simple solution would seem to
be to remove the subsidy and sell diesel at market prices, or
at least at market prices to the foreign entities. The local
population would probably not be offended by this move if it
resulted in the commercial availability of diesel fuel.


9. (C/NF) The GSE has yet to locate a foreign benefactor
willing to ameliorate this fuel shortage, despite recent
high-level visits to Iran, Saudi Arabia, and elsewhere. Post
believes these trips to be primarily fund-raisers, with the
GSE looking for international investors and donors to help
alleviate their cash and fuel shortages. If Gbepo's
information is accurate, unless the regime's efforts pan out,
the GSE will face severe difficulties as early as July.


10. (C/NF) Should diesel, now scarce, become generally
unavailable, the local security situation and Post operations
could deteriorate rapidly. Eritrea's electric grid runs
entirely on diesel generators in Massawa. If diesel runs
out, the lights would go out across Eritrea with a few
exceptions -- among them notably the generator-equipped and
well-lit U.S. Embassy and our Embassy properties. Post's
compound contains large fuel tanks which position us better
than most local entities for a fuel crisis. Post could
sustain present operations on 100% generator power for two to
four weeks, and critical operations and residences for
approximately 90 days. As Eritrea's population already faces
extreme pressures, the loss of reliable electricity could
lead to the release of these pressures in unpredictable ways.
Post's Emergency Action Committee will closely monitor the
situation for any indication of worsening in of the current
fuel shortages.

MCMULLEN