Wakanda News Details

Lazarus Chakwera snubs fuel price hike

Consumers Association of Malawi (Cama) and other observers have frowned at the economic thinking of President Lazarus Chakwera by turning down a 30 percent fuel price hike proposal by the Malawi Energy Regulatory Authority (Mera).

On Tuesday night, the State House announced that Chakwera had rejected a proposed increase in the pump price of fuel by over 30 percent as proposed by agencies involved in the procurement and supply of fuel.

John Kapito

The decision has “baffled” Cama Executive Director John Kapito, who said yesterday that Chakwera’s decision would compound the already worsening fuel crisis in Malawi.

In Malawi, Mera is the only institution that is mandated to determine prices of energy sales and services.

The key determinants of the landed costs of petroleum products are the exchange rate of the Kwacha against the United States Dollar and the Free on Board prices of refined petroleum products on the international market.

Under the Automatic Fuel Pricing Mechanism, pump prices qualify for an adjustment when the landed costs of petroleum products move beyond the ± 5 percent trigger limit.

Mera last hiked the price of fuel on November 10 2023, a development that saw the price of a litre of diesel moving up from K1,930 to K,2,734 and that of petrol of similar quantity going up from K1,746 to K2,530.

The price of a litre of paraffin was hiked from K1,261 to K1,910.

On Tuesday night, Chakwera also gave fuel stakeholders 48 hours to resolve their failure to bring 31 million litres of affordable fuel that he secured a month ago through his new government-to-government policy.

The fuel is still awaiting haulage from Tanzania to Malawi.

But according to Kapito, Chakwera is “living in denial” by failing to accept that prevailing fuel prices are far below the buying price.

“Mera made their recommendations to hike fuel prices based on the economic realities on the ground. We have been making similar calls based on the same.

“I don’t know what the President is basing his decisions on. But definitely it’s not economics; maybe politics, being an election year. When fuel is not available, people are being forced to pay more money, in some cases as high as K10,000 per litre.

“So, which is better: To be paying about K3,500 per litre for fuel which is readily available or to be paying K10,000 per litre for fuel on the black market?” he said.

Natural Resources Committee of Parliament Chairperson Werani Chilenga, whose committee recently recommended a fuel price hike, said Wednesday that their task ends at making a recommendation.

According to Chilenga, there was nothing more the committee could do.

“We, as Parliament, only make recommendations. We don’t go beyond that. Whether the recommendations are taken on board or not is beyond us,” Chilenga said.

Coincidentally, Vice President Michae

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