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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
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Sudan
Index
Sennar Dam on the Blue Nile, one of Sudan's oldest dams
and major source of electric power for eastern Sudan
Courtesy Embassy of the Republic of Sudan, Washington
Waterworks at Maridi, west of Juba
Courtesy Robert O. Collins
In 1990 the chief sources of energy were wood and charcoal,
hydroelectric power, and imported oil. Wood and charcoal were
principally used by households for heating and cooking.
Substantial quantities of wood fuels, amounting to roughly onefifth of the country's annual consumption, were also used by
commercial operations--chiefly baking and brickmaking and, to a
lesser extent, tobacco curing. Some use was also made of other
vegetable matter including sugarcane bagasse, which met a
significant part of the energy needs of the sugar mills, and
cotton stalks, used locally by households. Consumption of wood
and charcoal has continued to increase as the population has
grown, and some concern has been voiced at the gradual depletion
of forest and woodland resources serving the large towns. Overuse
of the sparser vegetation in the semidesert grazing areas
reportedly was resulting in some fuel deficiencies in those
regions, as well as in desertification.
The country's hydroelectric potential has been only partially
exploited. Major undeveloped hydropower sources existed at the
several cataracts on the main Nile downstream from Khartoum.
Natural gas was discovered in the early 1960s along the Red Sea
coast in a fruitless search for petroleum. In the mid-1970s,
further quantities were found during additional oil explorations,
but development was not considered at the time to be commercially
feasible. In October 1988, Sudan announced that natural gas
production would start in one year; presumably this would come
from the 85 billion cubic meters of gas reserves Chevron had
earlier estimated. The 1979 and later petroleum discoveries in
southern and southwestern Sudan added a new potential domestic
energy source. However, these deposits to date have yielded
little oil because petroleum companies, such as Chevron, had
suspended oilfield explorations in these regions because of the
civil war. Sudan had no known deposits of coal or lignite as of
the early 1990s.
Data as of June 1991
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