64738 COUNTRY REPORT Sudan’s Infrastructure: A Continental Perspective Rupa Ranganathan and Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia JUNE 2011 © 2011 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 USA Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org E-mail: feedback@worldbank.org All rights reserved A publication of the World Bank. The World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, DC 20433 USA The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. 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All other queries on rights and licenses, including subsidiary rights, should be addressed to the Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA; fax: 202-522-2422; e-mail: pubrights@worldbank.org. About AICD and its country reports This study is a product of the Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic (AICD), a project designed to expand the world’s knowledge of physical infrastructure in Africa. AICD provides a baseline against which future improvements in infrastructure services can be measured, making it possible to monitor the results achieved from donor support. It also offers a solid empirical foundation for prioritizing investments and designing policy reforms in Africa’s infrastructure sectors. The AICD is based on an unprecedented effort to collect detailed economic and technical data on African infrastructure. The project has produced a series of original reports on public expenditure, spending needs, and sector performance in each of the main infrastructure sectors, including energy, information and communication technologies, irrigation, transport, and water and sanitation. Africa’s Infrastructure— A Time for Transformation, published by the World Bank and the Agence Française de Développement in November 2009, synthesized the most significant findings of those reports. The focus of the AICD country reports is on benchmarking sector performance and quantifying the main financing and efficiency gaps at the country level. These reports are particularly relevant to national policy makers and development partners working on specific countries. The AICD was commissioned by the Infrastructure Consortium for Africa following the 2005 G8 (Group of Eight) summit at Gleneagles, Scotland, which flagged the importance of scaling up donor finance for infrastructure in support of Africa’s development. 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Contents List of figures iii List of tables iv Acknowledgments v Synopsis 1 The continental perspective 2 Why infrastructure matters 3 The state of Sudan’s infrastructure 5 Transport 9 Roads 13 Ports 17 Air transport 19 Water supply and sanitation 22 Energy 27 Information and communication technology 34 Financing Sudan’s infrastructure 38 How much more can be done within the existing resource envelope? 42 Annual funding gap 44 What else can be done? 45 Bibliography and references 1 General 1 Financing 1 Growth 1 Information and communication technologies 2 Irrigation 2 Power 2 Transport 3 Water supply and sanitation 4 Other 5 List of figures Figure 1a. Infrastructure’s historic contribution to economic growth, 1990–95 vs 2000–05 4 Figure 1b. Infrastructure’s potential future contribution to economic growth 4 Figure 2. The demography, topography, and natural resources of all parts of Sudan 5 Figure 3. Development of the regional infrastructure backbone and national backbones in Sudan 7 Figure 4. National and regional transport network in all parts of Sudan 9 Figure 5. Transport poses an obstacle to business in some areas of Sudan 9 Figure 6. Moving freight within Sudan vs. moving imports from Durban to Lusaka 11 Figure 7. Expense of moving freight within Sudan and across southern Africa 12 Figure 8. Road quality in Sudan 13 Figure 9. Road traffic in Sudan 14 Figure 10. Port Sudan faces serious congestion problems 17 Figure 11. Khartoum is the main airport in Sudan 19 iii Figure 12. Evolution of seats and city pairs in Sudan 22 Figure 13. Water resources in Sudan 23 Figure 14. Limited access to advanced water technologies in urban Sudan 24 Figure 15. Sanitation access is largely bimodal 25 Figure 16. Hidden costs of selected water utilities, as percentage of revenue 26 Figure 17. Power infrastructure in Sudan 27 Figure 18a. Electricity is the largest obstacle to doing business in Sudan 30 Figure 18b. High reliance on generators for power 30 Figure 19. A small share of Sudan’s power consumption is for industrial activities 30 Figure 20. Moderate power tariffs in Sudan 31 Figure 21. Benchmarking historic power production costs in Sudan 31 Figure 22. Large hidden costs at the NEC due to underpricing and unaccounted losses 32 Figure 23. Hidden costs are high in Sudan relative to other African countries 33 Figure 24. Existing tariffs for power are insufficient to recover huge operating costs and long-run marginal costs 33 Figure 25. Sudan’s ICT backbone infrastructure as of the mid-2000s 34 Figure 26. A small subsidy could have closed the mobile telephony coverage gap in all parts of Sudan 36 Figure 27. The voice telephony gap could easily have been filled in Sudan 37 Figure 28. Sudan’s infrastructure spending needs in the regional context, as share of GDP 40 Figure 29. Sudan’s current infrastructure spending is average by African standards 41 Figure 30. Sudan’s pattern of capital investment in infrastructure and that of comparator countries 42 Figure 31. Underpricing of power and water in Sudan 43 Figure 32. The burden of inefficiency in Sudan’s power and water utilities 44 Figure 33. Many African countries capture more private investment than Sudan 45 List of tables Table 1. Achievements and challenges in Sudan’s infrastructure sectors 8 Table 2. Benchmarking Sudan’s national network against African aggregates for regional corridors 10 Table 3. Time and costs associated with transport within Sudan 10 Table 4. Benchmarking the performance of Sudan’s roads 15 Table 5a. Land area in Sudan with high agricultural suitability 15 Table 5b. Distribution of agricultural value within Sudan 15 Table 6. Sudan’s spending needs for regional, national, rural, and urban connectivity 17 Table 7. Benchmarking Port Sudan’s performance 18 Table 8. Benchmarking air transport indicators for Sudan and select other countries 20 Table 9. Origin destination matrix—Sudan 21 Table 10. Benchmarking water and sanitation indicators in Sudan 23 Table 11. Operational indicators for water utilities in Sudan, 2005 26 Table 12. Relatively high usage of modern fuels for cooking in Sudan 28 Table 13. Benchmarking power indicators in Sudan 29 Table 14. Operational indicators for the NEC 32 Table 15. All parts of Sudan compare favorably to the average African country in terms of ICT access and prices 35 Table 16. Prices of Internet and phone calls in Sub-Saharan Africa, with and without access to submarine cables 37 Table 17. Illustrative investment targets for infrastructure in Sudan 38 Table 18. Indicative infrastructure spending needs in Sudan, 2006–15 39 Table 19. Financial flows to Sudan’s infrastructure, average 2001 to 2005 40 Table 20. Identified infrastructure projects financed by non-OECD financiers 41 Table 21. Sudan’s potential gains from greater operational efficiency 43 Table 22. Funding gaps by sector 44 Table 23. Savings from innovation 46 iv Acknowledgments This paper draws on contributions from sector specialists from the Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic Team; notably, Heinrich Bofinger on air transport, Alberto Nogales on roads, Carolina Dominguez on water, Michael Minges on information and communication technologies, Nataliya Pushak on public expenditure, and Alvaro Federico Barra on spatial analysis. The paper benefitted from substantial comments and guidance from Vivien Foster. The paper is based on information provided from colleagues in the Sudan country team: notably, Greg Toulmin (country program coordinator), William G. Battaile (senior country economist), Yutaka Yoshino (corridors), Justin Runji (transport), Tesfaye Bekalu (water), Tesfamichael Nahusenay (transport), and Riahan Elahi (power). v Synopsis Improvements in infrastructure in all parts of Sudan in recent years have had a strong impact on per capita growth, contributing 1.7 percentage points. Consistent with trends in other countries, the information and communication (ICT) revolution that swept Africa contributed the most to Sudan. Raising the infrastructure endowment of all parts of Sudan to that of the region’s best performer, Mauritius, could boost annual growth by about 3.5 percentage points. Sudan has invested heavily in infrastructure in recent years, with some notable achievements. Power generation capacity tripled in just a few years, rising from around 800 megawatts (MW) in 2005 to 2,687 MW in 2007, with a shift toward hydropower. Nevertheless, service reliability remains an issue. In ICT, Sudan has made enormous strides in liberalizing the sector and as a result has attracted significant private capital. Mobile penetration soared from less than 1 percent in 2000 to 33 percent in 2009. Recent connectivity to an undersea fiber-optic cable has led to expansions in access, improvements in quality, and reduction in prices. Looking ahead, Sudan’s most pressing infrastructure challenges lie in the water and transport sectors. Most of Sudan lacks access to safe sources of water. Access to sanitation is bimodal, where 40 percent of the population uses improved sanitation technologies and around 40 percent defecates in the open. Access challenges have been compounded by large inefficiencies at the water utilities. Inadequate collection of revenues, large distributional losses, and to some extent inability to recover costs have diverted over $120 million in revenues each year. In the transport sector, even though the road network almost doubled in length to 6,200 kilometers (km) between 2000 and 2008, a sizable share of the country lacks roads. There are a few well-developed internal corridors, but rural connectivity is almost nonexistent. Road density is exceedingly low and traffic along most roads is sparse. Poor-quality roads drastically undermine the efficiency of transport services. Further, the large volumes of unpaved roads make movement impossible during the rainy season. Sudan’s infrastructure development has so far had a national focus, and there is much that remains to be done to achieve greater regional integration. While internal road corridors are developed, connectivity with neighbors is largely absent. Sudan has a natural gateway to the sea through Port Sudan but the port’s performance is severely hindered by long dwell times, high costs, and capacity constraints. Looking further ahead, Sudan has the potential to be a major hydropower exporter if additional capacity could be developed and transmission links with neighboring Nile Basin countries strengthened. Addressing Sudan’s infrastructure challenges will require sustained expenditure of almost $4.2 billion per year over the next decade, mainly for capital investments. In terms of the size of the economy that level of infrastructure needs is equivalent to just over 20 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). Not unthinkable of, as it is comparable to the 15 percent of GDP China has been investing in recent years on infrastructure. Yet, it is an ambitious target for Sudan as it would represent almost tripling the recently observed annual average of infrastructure spending (about 7 percent of GDP). Water and transport account for 80 percent of the spending needs. SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Sudan already spends approximately $1.5 billion per year on infrastructure, equivalent to about 6 percent of its GDP. Two-thirds of Sudan’s spending consists of investment, with Chinese funds accounting for 40 percent of investment finance. Private investment in Sudanese infrastructure is also significant, at 23 percent of the total, while official development assistance (ODA) is negligible. In contrast to its peers, Sudan’s capital spending on infrastructure is strongly skewed toward the power sector. A further $580 million a year (equivalent to 2.7 percent of GDP) is wasted due to inefficiencies, largely due to mispricing of power. Over 80 percent of these inefficiencies derive from the power sector. Electricity is currently priced at 50 percent of its cost-recovery threshold, leading to losses worth $378 million annually. The mispricing of power results in inefficiencies on the order of $380 million for the utility, while distribution losses are worth $106 million annually. Sudan’s annual infrastructure funding gap is $2.9 billion per year, equivalent to almost 14 percent of its GDP. Most of the funding gap is associated with the water and transport sectors, each of which is more than $1 billion short of resources. But these gaps could each be reduced by half by judicious choice of lower-cost technologies for water and sanitation services and road surfacing. No funding gap is found for power, due to the relatively high level of spending in recent years and the magnitude of inefficiencies that could be captured to bolster sector finances. To bridge the funding gap, Sudan could build on its existing success in capturing infrastructure finance both from China and the private sector. Sudan has done quite well in attracting about 1 percent of GDP in private investment for infrastructure; but a number of other African peers have done even better, capturing two to three times as much in proportional terms. Nevertheless, the largest funding gaps in transport and water may be less amenable to private finance. One option would be for Sudan to draw increasingly on its Chinese and Arab partners to support transport and water investments, and allow the private sector to play a larger role in the power sector, where it has not been active to date. Nevertheless, the funding gap remains substantial relative to the Sudanese economy. The continental perspective The Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic (AICD) has gathered and analyzed extensive data on infrastructure in more than 40 Sub-Saharan countries, including Sudan. The results have been presented in reports covering different areas of infrastructure—ICT, irrigation, power, transport, and water and sanitation—and different policy areas, including investment needs, fiscal costs, and sector performance. This report presents the key AICD findings for Sudan, allowing the country’s infrastructure situation to be benchmarked against that of its African peers. Sudan is a relatively well-off low-income state richly endowed with oil; therefore, both low-income and resource-rich benchmarks will be used to evaluate its performance. Detailed comparisons will also be made with immediate regional neighbors in the East African Community (EAC) and with countries in North Africa in some cases. Several methodological issues should be borne in mind. First, because of the cross-country nature of data collection, a time lag is inevitable. The period covered by the AICD runs from 2001 to 2006. Most technical data presented are for 2006–07 (or the most recent year available), while financial data are 2 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE typically averaged over the available period to smooth out the effect of short-term fluctuations. Second, to make comparisons across countries, the indicators and analysis were standardized so that everything was done on a consistent basis. This means that some of the indicators presented here may be slightly different from those that are routinely reported and discussed at the country level. Third, in terms of nomenclature, all parts of Sudan refers to Sudan prior to the split of the country, Sudan refers to the northern part of Sudan, and South Sudan is the newly independent country. Fourth, data for Sudan and South Sudan were originally collected and processed for the country as a whole, that is, all parts of Sudan. But given recent geopolitical events, including the seceding of South Sudan from the rest of the country, and the vast differences between Sudan and South Sudan in terms of topography, infrastructure, and financial resources, this report presents analyses and results that reflect the situation in Sudan as much as possible. In a few cases, this involves relying on imperfect data and using proxy variables to attribute otherwise global estimates. Why infrastructure matters The recent schism of all parts of Sudan into Sudan and South Sudan will have massive impacts on the Sudanese economy. For one, the splitting of oil assets that are mostly in South Sudan will impact Sudan’s overall resource revenues in the coming years. The economy for all parts of Sudan grew at the rate of 6 percent per capita between 2003 and 2007. Its growth was more robust than that of several of its East African peers, who grew at 4 percent per capita during the same period.1 The advent of an oil-based economy in Sudan was the harbinger of robust growth between 2000 and 2008. Oil constituted around 90 percent of Sudanese exports and was driven by oil production in South Sudan. Oil resources enabled the government to roll out new physical and social infrastructure, focused primarily on the northern part of the country. There was an increase in the volume of transportation between Khartoum, where economic activity has been concentrated, and Port Sudan, the coastal gateway for imports and exports. Empirical evidence linking infrastructure to recent economic growth patterns documents how the allocation of oil wealth to infrastructure development has impacted the economy. Between the 1990s and early 2000s, all parts of Sudan reaped large growth benefits in infrastructure development. Infrastructure contributed over 1.75 percentage points to all parts of Sudan’s per capita growth (figure 1a). The ICT sector made the strongest impact on growth. The road and power sectors made modest contributions in contrast to other countries, where inadequate power infrastructure had a negative effect on growth. Since most of the improvements in the ICT sector were recorded in Sudan and very little in South Sudan, it is reasonable to expect that the largest gains in growth came through contributions from the ICT sector in Sudan. 1 The growth represented is based on GDP per capita (constant 2000$). The East African peers are Burundi, Ethiopia, Djibouti, Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda. 3 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 1a. Infrastructure’s historic contribution to economic growth, 1990–95 vs 2000–05 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 -0.5 -1 Congo, Rep Kenya East Africa Cameroon Cote d'Ivoire Tanzania Uganda Sudan Source: Calderón 2009. Note: ICT = information and communication technology. Infrastructure could contribute more to all parts of Sudan’s infrastructure in the future than it has in the past (figure 1b). Simulations suggest that if Sudan’s infrastructure were to be upgraded to the level of the best-performing country in Africa (Mauritius), the impact on per capita economic growth would be on the order of 3.5 percentage points. While all areas of infrastructure—ICT, power, and transport—need to be upgraded, improvements in roads can impact growth the most—by around 1.5 percent. Improvements in power infrastructure will add another 1 percent to per capita growth. Infrastructure’s immediate potential contribution to growth is less than it is in several other East African countries. Figure 1b. Infrastructure’s potential future contribution to economic growth 6 Potential contributions of per capita 5 4 growth 3 2 1 0 Cote d'Ivoire Kenya Cameroon Tanzania Sudan Congo, Rep of Uganda East Africa ICT Power Roads Source: Calderón 2009. Note: ICT = information and communication technology. 4 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE The state of Sudan’s infrastructure The spatial distribution of Sudan’s economy shows a sparse population with pockets of economic activity around a few urban centers. There is a heavier concentration of activity and population along the Nile (figure 2a). The topography of Sudan is divided into three regions—the deserts, the semi-arid Sahel region, and the wetlands and rain forests. The deserts in the north—the Nubian Desert to the east of the Nile, the Libyan Desert, and the rugged uplands to the northwest of the Nile—comprise around 30 percent of the area of Sudan. Central Sudan is characterized by the semi-arid Sahel region of steppes and low mountains. Southern Sudan has vast wetlands in the upper Nile region that are among the largest in the world. The Nile spans a vast length of Sudan’s territory. The tributaries of the Nile—the White Nile and Blue Nile—meet in Khartoum in the north. The White Nile crosses South Sudan from the Ugandan border, while the Blue Nile flows through east and central Sudan, irrigating a large part of the Sudanese land (figure 2b). Sudan is endowed with significant natural resource wealth in the form of metals and oil. There is one oilfield along the Red Sea in the north and another closer to the border of South Sudan (figure 2c). Figure 2. The demography, topography, and natural resources of all parts of Sudan a. Demography 5 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE b. Topography c. Natural resources Source: AICD. Note: The topography information is derived from www.imcg.net/gpd/africa/sudan.pdf.. 6 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Road density in Sudan is among the lowest in Africa and the world. The existing road arteries are centered on Khartoum as the hub. One artery connects Khartoum with the coastal gateway of Port Sudan, a second connects Sudan with Egypt and North Africa, a third connects Khartoum with the Eritrean border, and a fourth leads to Ethiopia. Connections to South Sudan are fragmented; there is little traffic overall. In fact, along most of the networks, except between the Red Sea and Khartoum, traffic is sparse and road conditions patchy at best. Power infrastructure is developed only around select urban centers. A national grid is nonexistent, and there are no cross-border interconnectors. Power infrastructure is primarily focused on hydropower, with some thermal generation capacity. In recent years Sudan has benefitted from an increase in capacity, but there is an even greater hydropower potential that can be exploited (figure 3b). Sudan is naturally endowed to be a large producer and exporter of agricultural products. It is a riparian country, its fertile soil centered on the Nile, and areas of high suitability can be better exploited (figure 3c). The bright spot of Sudan’s infrastructure is the ICT sector. ICT growth has accelerated and is comparable to regional averages. Mobile subscriptions have grown exponentially, and Sudan boasts of one of the most liberalized ICT markets in Africa, with a strong multinational presence. It is also relatively well endowed with fiber-optic connectivity to several undersea cables (figure 3d). This report begins by reviewing the main achievements and challenges of each of Sudan’s major infrastructure sectors (table 1). Thereafter, attention will turn to the problem of how to finance the outstanding infrastructure needs. Figure 3. Development of the regional infrastructure backbone and national backbones in Sudan a. Roads in Sudan b. Power infrastructure in all parts of Sudan 7 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE c. ICT in all parts of Sudan d. Water in all parts of Sudan Source: AICD. Table 1. Achievements and challenges in Sudan’s infrastructure sectors Sector Achievements Challenges Air transport Strong international gateway in Sudan, with Raising air safety standards; increasing government oversight in increasing traffic between Sudan and South Sudan. air transport. Per capita seats are higher than neighbors. Good connectivity with the Middle East, Europe, and Ethiopia. Energy Strong increase in installed capacity in Sudan Increasing the volume, reliability, and quality of electricity supply; between 2005 and 2009. Increasing reliance on tackling underpricing of services in the power utility to achieve hydropower. High reliance on modern fuels for cost recovery; reducing large system losses. cooking. Moderate tariffs for power. Strong record in collection of bills. Information and Impressive increase in mobile penetration across the Expanding the Internet bandwidth from existing low levels; communication country. Tariffs compare favorably with African peers. increasing the limited landline penetration. technology Sudan has among the most liberalized telecom (ICT) markets in Africa. Established regional infrastructure backbone for ICT with connection to undersea fiber- optic cables. Ports Increase in traffic in Port Sudan. Port authority has Reducing the long dwell times and truck cycle times at Port generated significant revenues and has used these Sudan; tackling high handling charges at Port Sudan; minimizing funds for port infrastructure upgrades. Port Sudan port-congestion-related delays and challenges. becoming a feeder port. Roads Increase in kilometers of road in the period 2000–08. Improving quality of roads; connecting rural areas with national Some good-quality roads connect major urban road network; enhancing efficiency of transport services; raising centers. institutional capacity in road sector. Surface Lower freight tariffs charges compared to several Enhancing road connectivity with neighbors; lowering high costs transport African peers because of a competitive trucking and long transit times associated with moving freight in and out of industry and lower petroleum prices. Internal Sudan. corridors are relatively well developed. Water and Boosting access to improved water and sanitation sources; sanitation reducing open defecation and reliance on surface water; attaining cost recovery for the water utility; tackling large distributional losses for utilities and improving collection of bills. Source: Summary based on analysis presented in this report. 8 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Transport Figure 4. National and regional transport network in all parts of Sudan Source: AICD. Multimodal transport Sudan’s transport infrastructure is Figure 5. Transport poses an obstacle to business in some areas of unevenly developed. Despite a few road Sudan corridors, a large share of Sudan is unconnected or lacks paved roads. The Transport is a major constraint networks consist of nearly 2,500 miles of single-track railroad with a feeder line (% firms) (supplemented with limited river Khartoum Nyala North Kordofan River Nile Red Sea Gezira steamers) of about 1,200 miles of paved and gravel road—primarily in greater Khartoum and Port Sudan. In addition some roads in the north-south direction have been built, as well as an oil pipeline Source: World Bank 2009b. that is 840 miles long and runs from the oilfields in the Nuba Mountains and Khartoum to Port Sudan on the Red Sea 9 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Around 22 percent of firms indicated that transport is a Table 2. Benchmarking Sudan’s national network major obstacle to business activity, with challenges more against African aggregates for regional corridors acute in some areas than others. A sizable share of establishments in Sudan used their own transport facilities. Implicit Freight tariff The average share of own-transport use ranged from 35 Road in good velocity (km (US cents per percent of the total value of production-related transport Corridor condition (%) per hour) tonne-km) activities within the country in Khartoum to 17 percent in Western 72 6 8 North Kordofan. Nyala Red Sea (with 26 percent) and Central 49 6.1 13 Gezira (with 25 percent) also registered a high rate of own- Eastern 82 8.1 7 transport use. Transport in Nyala (Darfur region), Southern 100 11.6 5 meanwhile, was cited as a constraint on doing business by Sudan 26 8.5–13.5 8–10 around 60 percent of the firms based there. South Sudan 0 6.4 20 Source: Teravaninthorn and Raballand 2009; Nathan The main internal corridors in Sudan are well 2010; UNLJC and FAO 2005; Yoshino 2010; World Bank developed and generally in good condition but do not staff estimates extend to provide cross-border connectivity with neighbors Note: Estimates for Sudan based on routes from Khartoum to Kosti and Khartoum to Port Sudan. For South (see figure 4). The trading artery in Sudan is the route that Sudan, costs are based on varying estimates for travel connects Kosti to Port Sudan via Khartoum. This road between Juba to Nimule. Implicit velocity is the total distance divided by the total time taken to make the trip, records the greatest traffic volumes in Sudan and boasts including time spent stationary at ports, border crossings, overall good-quality roads, particularly from Khartoum to and other stops. Port Sudan. Another corridor connects Sudan to the Djibouti Corridor offering connectivity to the Port of Djibouti and Addis Ababa. While systematic data on these routes are not available, traffic volumes from Sudan along this corridor are expected to be very low, and the quality of roads range from fair to poor. Connectivity with South Sudan is practically nonexistent and was never a strategic priority. The regional corridor connecting to South Sudan is in bad condition and records very low traffic volumes. During the rainy season (April/May to October/November), a majority of the roads particularly in South Sudan are impenetrable. Sudan records average performance by Table 3. Time and costs associated with transport African standards but poor performance within Sudan when compared to global standards. Along Route Mode of transport Time (days) Implicit velocity some of the internal transport routes, Khartoum– surface transport moves at a pace that Road and river 7 4.7 Malakal ranges from 8.5 kilometers per hour Road 5 6.7 (kmph)2 to over 13 kmph,3 comparable to Khartoum– Road and river 13.5 6.3 Juba East Africa; in the parts less travelled and Road 7.5 11.4 with poorer-quality roads, velocity is Source: AICD calculations based on data from Yoshino and others (2009), UNJLC consistent with central African countries and FAO (2005), and Keer- MISC (2007). (table 2). Overall, freight in Sudan moves at the pace of a horse and buggy. 2 This is the estimated velocity of traffic between Khartoum to Kosti. 3 This is the estimated velocity of traffic between Khartoum and Port Sudan. 10 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Poor road transport connectivity between Sudan and South Sudan requires the use of multimodal transport during half the year and is associated with lengthy transit times. Roads, particularly during the rainy season, are often unavailable. Relying on other forms of transport does not solve the problem: river transport services are not well developed, ports are inadequate, and commercial vessels are old. Freight that has to move via river takes six days longer than if it were to travel only by road (table 3). Services are limited between Juba and Kosti, and are used mainly for transporting goods arriving by train in Port Sudan. The cost of moving freight in Sudan is almost twice what it is on other continents, though it compares with the average for Africa. The average freight tariff between Khartoum and Port Sudan is about $0.08 per tonne-kilometer (tonne-km), and between Khartoum and Kosti is slightly higher, an average of $0.10 per tonne-km. These prices are comparable to that of East Africa but much higher than the global standard of around $0.04 per tonne-km. The middle-of-the-range costs of moving freight—relative to the African average—are driven by the competitiveness of the trucking industry and access to lower-priced petroleum. In Sudan the trucking industry appears competitive, with few barriers to entry. Growth in the trucking fleet was steady during 2004–06: 10 percent annually for lorries, 20 percent for tank trucks, and over 40 percent for dry-cargo heavy trucks. Additionally, the trucking sector is not cartelized as it is in West and Central Africa. Absence of cartels keeps profit margins reasonable without significant markups. Further, the low cost of petroleum, oil, and lubricants in Sudan—50 percent lower than the regional aggregate—helps maintain reasonable prices. Trucks travelling to South Sudan, however, may encounter various transport bottlenecks that increase costs. For example, one truck transporting sacks of onions from Kassala to Malakal was subject to taxes and fee payments at about 20 different locations, totaling 2,000 SDG ($800) (Yoshino 2009). Similar payments have not been reported while travelling within Sudan. Moving freight in Sudan is Figure 6. Moving freight within Sudan vs. moving imports from constrained by inadequate infrastructure Durban to Lusaka and high costs. Comparing the 1000 competitiveness of Sudan’s main trading artery (Port Sudan to Kosti) with Africa’s 800 best-performing corridor (the North-South 600 corridor) reveals that there are 400 significantly more costs and longer delays 200 associated with moving along Sudan’s 0 arteries (figures 6 and 7). Moving freight Port Sudan- Kosti Durban-Lusaka within Sudan takes longer than moving Port Road transport Border Administrative imports from Durban to Lusaka—a route across three countries that is 800 km Source: AICD calculations based on Nathan (2010); UNLJC and FAO (2005), longer. and Yoshino (2010). Transit times can be broken down into four components: the travel times of moving goods, that is, the time of travel based on the effective velocity along each corridor; administrative time spent importing 11 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE goods to a country; port time, that is, the time taken to clear goods at ports; and border time, that is, the delays incurred in crossing borders. Transport costs are based on unit costs of moving freight along specific corridors, whereas administrative costs are based on costs involved in transporting imports into a country. Port and border delays were quantified into costs based on the assumption that delays cost $5 per day per tonne of imports. Port-related delays Figure 7. Expense of moving freight within Sudan and across southern Africa are the primary reason why it takes 18 days longer to move freight Costs per tonne to import freight (US from Port Sudan to Kosti than from Durban to Lusaka, a $) route that is 800 km longer and spans three countries. The time Port Sudan- Kosti Durban-Lusaka required to move Port Road transport Border Administrative freight within Sudan does not include Source: AICD calculations based on Nathan (2010); UNLJC and FAO (2005), and Yoshino (2010). border-related delays or customs clearance processes that imports or exports to another country would require. The main cause of the delays within Sudan are the extremely long wait times by vessels for a berth and long dwell times in Port Sudan. Durban, one of the most efficient ports in Africa, records far fewer delays. In addition to the long delays, it costs more to move freight from Port Sudan to Kosti than it does to import freight to Lusaka from Durban. The extremely high costs posed by Port Sudan are reflected in the total cost required to move freight. Moving freight within Sudan is also much more difficult than across southern Africa (table 2). It is striking that even though imported freight to Zambia is subject to various customs fees and border delays, it is still cheaper overall. 12 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Roads Figure 8. Road quality in Sudan Source: AICD 13 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 9. Road traffic in Sudan Source: AICD. Despite the road network’s expansion since the advent of the oil industry, Sudan’s performance in the road sector lags regional aggregates. Between 2000 and 2008, the length of roads almost doubled from 3,400 km to over 6,200 km. The network expansion involved major arterial routes that connect Khartoum with Port Sudan and onward to Egypt (Berger Group and Doshi Borgan & Partners 2010). While these north-south links are developed and in relatively good condition, east-west connectivity lags behind (see figure 8). Sudan has extremely low road densities and poor paving rates; a significant segment of the road network is in poor condition. The classified road network in Sudan is around 30 percent the size of what is prevalent in low-income countries and resource-rich countries, and traffic volumes are extremely low. Figure 9 indicates that a bulk of the traffic is concentrated in the northeastern part of the country, mainly from Khartoum to Port Sudan and Khartoum to the Red Sea. These low traffic volumes raise questions about the extent to which roads in Sudan meet traffic thresholds that justify paving. 14 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 4. Benchmarking the performance of Sudan’s roads Low- Middle- income income Resource Indicator Unit Sudan countries East Africa countries rich Classified road density km/1,000 km2 of arable land area 37 88 101 278 57 Paving ratio % of primary network paved 47 71.6 32 82.1 Paved road traffic AADT (vehicles per day) 369 1,341 1,549 3,798 1,408 Unpaved road traffic AADT (vehicles per day) 13 39 47 75 54 Classified network condition Percentage in good or fair condition 26 86 59 80 Paved network condition % of paved roads in good or fair condition 24 86 79 82 68 Unpaved network condition % of unpaved roads in good or fair condition 0 56 58 61 Source: Derived from AICD calculations. Note: The paving ratio for Sudan is calculated based on the classified road network that is paved. The paved network condition in Sudan is based on regional and national roads in Sudan. The paved road network for Sudan does not include roads of fair quality because the length of roads with fair quality is unknown. AADT = average annual daily traffic. Table 5a. Land area in Sudan with high agricultural suitability All parts of Percent contribution to aggregate agriculture value South Sudan Sudan Sudan < 10% but high suitability 4,381 1,438 5,819 10%–50% 2,279 4,793 7,072 > 50% 54 265 319 Total area of high agricultural suitability 6,714 6,496 13,210 Table 5b. Distribution of agricultural value within Sudan All parts of Percent contribution to aggregate agriculture value South Sudan Sudan Sudan < 10% but high suitability 65 22 44 10%–50% 34 74 54 > 50% 1 4 2 Total area of high agricultural suitability 100 100 100 Source: AICD calculations. 15 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE The poor quality of roads in Sudan significantly lowers the efficiency of transport services. The poor maintenance and need for overlay in Sudan are due to inadequate funding for road maintenance and the lack of cost recovery along existing roads. The net result is a rapid deterioration of the quality of existing roads. The revenue collected by the National Highway Authority from tolls covers only 100 km of overlay and rehabilitation per year. In addition, a backlog of preventive maintenance needs has accumulated, to the extent that between 400 and 500 km of rehabilitation and overlay per year would now be required. Inadequate enforcement of restrictions on axle loads is further accelerating road deterioration (World Bank 2009a). Agricultural land is very lightly used in Sudan, in part due to inadequate roads. Sizable parts of economically productive areas in Sudan are isolated from the markets. Development of roads is a necessary precondition to exploiting the agricultural potential of Sudan. Sudan has roughly 650,000 square kilometers (km2) of land (table 5a) with high agricultural potential, but 75 percent of it is farmed at only 10 to 50 percent of its capacity. Around a quarter of the land that has high suitability is farmed at only 10 percent of its capacity (tables 5a and 5b). Transport spending needs can be estimated based on the assumption that key economic nodes need to be connected. It is estimated that Sudan needs 2,900 km of road to meet regional connectivity standards (linking Khartoum to international frontiers); 5,300 km to meet national connectivity standards (linking all provincial capitals to the regional network); and a further 34,201 km to meet rural connectivity standards (linking land responsible for 80 percent of existing agricultural production value to the national network as well as linking land with the capability of producing 50 percent of the nonrealized agricultural value). In addition, the urban connectivity standard assumes an extension of the paved road network to within 500 meters of the population. Two scenarios are considered. In the base scenario, all infrastructure is maintained in good condition, and higher-end surfacing options are used (asphalt for all regional, national, and urban roads and single- surface treatment for rural roads). In the pragmatic scenario, half the infrastructure is maintained in good condition and half in fair condition, and lower-cost surfacing options are used (single-surface treatment for national and urban roads and gravel for rural roads). An initial estimation of the connectivity needs suggests that sizable spending requirements—$750 million to $1 billion—are needed to reach the goals outlined in either scenario. The largest components of this total are attributed to improving conditions of existing roads and expansion of capacity. Once basic connectivity goals have been reached, an ongoing road sector maintenance budget of at least $400 million per year would be required to expand the network, and an additional $390 million would be required to sustain the network. In the pragmatic scenario, while the standards for new developments and upgrading are relaxed, emphasis on maintenance is sustained. 16 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 6. Sudan’s spending needs for regional, national, rural, and urban connectivity Road length in good condition (km) Spending needs ($ million per year over a 10-year period) Expand Upgrade Improve As share Mode Actual Required capacity category condition Maintenance Total of GDP (%) Basic scenario National 874 5,372 0 213 23 123 360 1.7 Regional 2,010 2,893 189 84 38 129 440 2.1 UAI 50 4,226 222 20 5 15 262 1.2 RAI — 34,201 0 310 33 122 466 2.2 Total 2934 46,692 411 627 99 390 1,528 7.2 Pragmatic scenario National 874 5,372 0 160 3 119 282 1.3 Regional 2,010 2,893 113 33 4 117 268 1.3 UAI 50 1,839 63 17 5 15 100 0.5 RAI 34,201 0 116 2 258 376 1.8 Total 2,934 44,305 176 326 13 509 1,025 4.8 Source: Adapted from Carruthers, Krishnamani, and Murray (2009). Note: RAI = Rural Accessibility Index ; UAI = Urban Accessibility Index Ports Achievements The Sudanese Port Authority (SPC) Figure 10. Port Sudan faces serious congestion problems has used its large revenues to invest in infrastructure improvements at Port 150% Sudan. The SPC revenue per ton of 125% Ratio of current demand to throughput increased by 47 percent in 100% reported capacity dollar terms between 2000 and 2005. A 75% combination of a higher realization per 50% tonne handled and large increases in 25% throughput has led to the generation of 0% substantial surpluses. Information from Cotonou Cape Town Luanda Port Sudan Douala Mombasa Salaam Dar es the mid-2000s suggests that the SPC invested around $187 million in development projects. This resulted in the Source: AICD ports database. main areas being in good condition with a number of new berths added and infrastructure projects commissioned. The SPC enjoys a monopoly in its role as the country’s main node for maritime trade, and its revenues appear high relative to the number of ships using the port and the volume of cargo it handles (World Bank 2008). 17 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Challenges Port Sudan remains one of the most inefficient ports in Africa. Compared to regional benchmarks, container dwell time at Port Sudan is over four times that of global best practices and among the worst in Sub-Saharan Africa. Truck cycle times for receipt and delivery of cargo at Port Sudan are 24 times higher than global benchmarks, and crane productivity is less than a third of what is observed in several parts of Africa. The handling charges at Port Sudan are at the lower end of what is charged in other African ports, but the inefficiencies present a huge deterrent to increased usage of the port (table 7). Table 7. Benchmarking Port Sudan’s performance Southern Global best Port Sudan Mombasa Dar es Salaam Africa West Africa practice Performance Container dwell time (days) 28 5 7 4–8 11–30 <7 Truck processing time (hours) 24 4.5 5 2–12 6–24 1 Crane productivity (containers per hour) 8 10 20 8–22 7–20 20–30 Crane productivity (tonnes per hour) 8 21 23 10–25 7–15 >30 Charges Container handling ($ per TEU) 150 67.5 275 110–243 100–320 80–150 General-cargo handling ($ per tonne) 10 6.5 13.5 11–15 8–15 7–9 Container handling ($ per TEU) -130 -54.5 -248 110–244 100–321 80–151 Source: AICD ports database. Note: TEU = 20-foot equivalent unit. A steady increase in containers handled at Port Sudan has created serious port congestion problems, adding significant delays to the movement of freight. Several of the region’s ports are beginning to experience serious capacity constraints (figure 10) due to burgeoning demand associated with increases in container traffic and dry-bulk cargo. Port Sudan in particular is already operating at 80 percent capacity at least, a level of intensity that creates problems in terms of congestion. There is some scope for easing capacity constraints by improving the efficiency of port performance, although ultimately new investments will be needed (see figure 10). Labor requirements at the port lead to overstaffing, poor productivity, and higher costs. In the North Port, the equivalent of a dock labor board exists and there is a legal requirement to use labor from a pool of 25,000 workers. In the container terminal, the SPC provides the labor and acknowledges that it is overstaffed by 7,300 workers (World Bank 2008). 18 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Air transport Figure 11. Khartoum is the main airport in Sudan Source: AICD. Achievements Sudan’s per capita airline seat capacity is higher than that of most of its neighbors, excluding Kenya and Egypt (which have their own exceptionally strong national carriers). Sudan has developed a strong international gateway for air transport in Khartoum. Overall traffic in Sudan has risen, largely driven by intercontinental traffic. Consistent with the rest of Africa, the overall size of the aircraft flown has decreased from wide-body to single-aisle jets. 19 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Growth in seats for travel between Sudan and South Sudan tripled between 2001 and 2007. The Diio SRS shows that in 2007, while there were 219,741 seats for travel within Sudan, there were only 696 seats advertised for South Sudan (table 8) These figures may mask the fact that traffic between the two regions has actually grown rather significantly—from 24,452 seats in 2001 to 87,191 in 2007. How much of that traffic is hub traffic through Khartoum traveling between points in South Sudan is not known. Table 8. Benchmarking air transport indicators for Sudan and select other countries4 Country Sudan Ethiopia Chad CAR Kenya Egypt Traffic (2007) Domestic travel (‘000 seats per year, excluding south) 218 729 n.a. n.a. 2,093 5,959 International travel within Africa (‘000 seats per year) 302 1,837 110 21 3,145 1,886 Intercontinental travel (‘000 seats per year) 2,052 2,005 89 24 2,755 15,793 Seats available per 100 people 9.8 5.8 1.8 1 21 27.5 Herfindahl-Hirschmann Index—air transport market (%) 15.29 70.61 36.35 50.26 39.47 24 Quality Percent of seat-km in newer aircraft 71.9 98.5 99.5 100 80.2 90.7 Percent of seat-km in medium or smaller aircraft 72 39.7 93.6 23.5 20.8 51.2 Percent of carriers passing IATA/IOSA audit 0 100 0 0 11.1 50 FAA/IASA audit status No audit Passed No audit 0 0 Passed Source: Bofinger 2009. Note: The Herfindahl-Hirschmann Index (HHI) is a commonly accepted measure of market concentration. It is calculated by squaring the market share of each firm competing in the market and then summing the resulting numbers. A HHI of 100 indicates the market is a monopoly; the lower the HHI, the more diluted the market power exerted by one company/agent. FAA = U.S. Federal Aviation Administration; IASA = International Aviation Safety Assessment; IATA = International Air Transport Association; IOSA = IATA International Safety Audit; CAR = Central African Republic. n.a. = Not applicable. Challenges Existing air connectivity in Sudan is largely oriented toward the Middle East and Egypt. Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) is used as the main connecting point to transit to the rest of Africa, while Sudan has, for example, no direct flights from Khartoum to Kampala (table 9). There is a lack of regulatory oversight in the air transport sector. A number of small, domestic carriers, registered generally as charter airlines, are operational. These operators may act as scheduled carriers, but do not report information to a booking or ticket sales agency. Often such operators in countries with poor oversight pose an air safety problem as they operate aircraft maintained on minimal budgets, with maintenance crew and pilots whose skills may not be consistent with international standards. The percentage of seats in Sudan flown on newer aircraft is smaller than its neighbors, creating additional safety risks. 4 All data are as of 2007 based on estimations and computations of scheduled advertised seats, as published by the Diio SRS Analyzer. This captures 98 percent of worldwide traffic, but a percentage of African traffic is not captured by these data. 20 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 9. Origin destination matrix—Sudan United Arab Emirates Syrian Arab Republic United Kingdom Saudi Arabia Netherlands Germany Lebanon Ethiopia Bahrain Yemen Jordan Sudan Turkey Eritrea Kenya Egypt Qatar Libya Bahrain 10 Egypt 38 Eritrea 1 Ethiopia 10 Germany 4 Jordan 6 Kenya 14 Lebanon 3 Libya 2 Netherlands 3 Sudan 10 38 1 10 4 6 13 3 2 3 15 17 2 7 29 3 2 Qatar 14 Saudi Arabia 17 Syrian Arab Republic 4 Turkey 7 United Arab Emirates 29 United Kingdom 3 Yemen 2 Source: Bofinger 2009. 21 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 12. Evolution of seats and city pairs in Sudan a. Seats b. City pairs 4,000,000 60 3,500,000 50 3,000,000 40 Number of seats 2,500,000 City pairs 2,000,000 30 1,500,000 20 1,000,000 500,000 10 - 0 2,001 2,004 2,007 2009 (Est) 2,001 2,004 2,007 2009 (Est) Total Total International International Intercontinental excluding flights between NA and SSA Between North and South Intercontinental Between North and South Domestic Source: Bofinger 2009. Derived from AICD national database (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/data). Note: As reported to international reservation systems. NA = North Africa; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa. Water supply and sanitation Challenges Around 85 percent of Sudan’s populace lacks access to safe sources of water (figure 13). Over 25 percent of the population relies on surface water and almost 60 percent relies on wells and boreholes. Sudan’s reliance on wells and boreholes for water supply is higher than for any other country in its peer groups and is becoming a challenge for the country. Fewer than half the wells and boreholes in Africa provide safe water (table 10). Sanitation access in Sudan is bimodal. On the one hand, 40 percent of the population has access to improved latrines; on the other, 40 percent continues to practice open defecation. Both ratios are substantially higher than for the relevant resource-rich and low-income African peer groups. In contrast to these peers, reliance on flush toilets and traditional latrines is much more limited. A very small share of the population—15 percent—has access to utility water, well below all other African benchmarks. Available information suggests that there is almost no access to piped water, and stand posts are the only form of utility water that is accessed. Census data for all parts of Sudan indicate that in 1993 about 60 percent of the population had access to utility water but there has been a steep decline in access rates—down to 35 percent—in the 2000s. Since access to utility water is negligible in South Sudan, the access data for all parts of Sudan reported in the census relates primarily to Sudan itself. 22 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE The precarious decline in access has been attributed to a lack of maintenance of water supply assets that has led to their gradual dilapidation. Figure 13. Water resources in Sudan Source: AICD Table 10. Benchmarking water and sanitation indicators in Sudan5 Resource-rich Low-income Middle-income Unit Sudan countries countries countries 2009 Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Access to piped water % pop — 13 9.3 61 Access to stand posts % pop 15 12 17.1 22 Access to wells/boreholes % pop 58 47 39.3 5 Access to surface water % pop 27 27 34.2 11 Access to flush toilets/septic tanks % pop 5 13 4.7 48 Access to improved latrines % pop 41 37 18.3 34 Access to traditional latrines % pop 11 22 38.5 7 5 The AICD used the March 2010 Joint Monitoring Data (JMP) coverage statistics as the main source of access data on water supply and sanitation, and processed it under a standardized methodology to allow cross-country comparisons. The AICD calculations might differ from the access rates reported by governments. 23 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Resource-rich Low-income Middle-income Unit Sudan countries countries countries 2009 Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Open defecation % pop 43 28 38.3 11 2005 Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Mid-2000s Domestic water consumption liter/capita/day 53 115 50.9 196 Revenue collection % sales 64 60 94.1 99 Distribution losses % production 40 40 34.8 29 Cost recovery % total costs 62 67 89.5 86 Operating-cost recovery % operating costs 86 94 125.2 121 Labor productivity connections per employee 93 96 175.9 203 Total hidden costs % of revenue 121 194 67 Other Scarce water Sudan developing resources regions Average effective tariff U.S. cents per m3 60 57 3–60 Source: Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) and AICD water and sanitation utilities database (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/data).Note: Access figures calculated by the AICD based on the 2000 and 2006 DHS figures published by the Joint Monitoring Program (WHO 2010). — = Not available. Only 40 percent of urban dwellers rely on Figure 14. Limited access to advanced water technologies in advanced water technologies for their water urban Sudan supply. Close to 40 percent of the population 100 has access to utility water—mainly stand 90 posts—in urban areas, and around 5 percent in 80 70 % population rural areas. Almost 70 percent of rural Sudanese 60 rely on wells and boreholes, 30 percent higher 50 40 than in urban areas. It is very striking that there 30 is little difference in the reliance on surface 20 water—around 25 percent of both rural and 10 0 urban Sudanese obtain their water from open sources. There is significantly greater usage of improved sanitation technology types in urban Urban Rural areas (figure 14). Urban areas have twice the Source: Access figures calculated by AICD using data 2009 DHS data. level of access to flush toilets or improved latrines compared to rural areas. In the case of flush toilets, the access rate in urban areas is 14 percent compared to 1 percent in rural areas. Sixty percent of the urban population relies on improved latrines compared to 32 percent of the population in rural areas (figure 15). Some 68 percent of the rural population defecate in the open compared to 12 percent of urban dwellers. Deep boreholes and hand pumps are the predominant technology used for water supply in the poorer households, and water filters (improved sources of water) are the water supply modalities in wealthier households. Around 41 percent of the poorest quintile of households derive their water from wells and 24 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE boreholes, while 12 percent of the wealthiest quintile of households rely on water from wells and boreholes. Lower-income Sudanese use lower-end Figure 15. Sanitation access is largely bimodal sanitation technologies. Around 54 percent of the poorest quintile of the population defecates 100 90 in the open compared to 13 percent of the 80 richest quintile. While none of the poorest 70 % population quintile of the population uses flush toilets, 60 50 almost 20 percent of the richest quintile do so. 40 The most dominant sanitation technology across 30 the board is pit toilets. Disparities are less 20 10 glaring in the use of pit toilets—around 42 0 percent of the poorest quintile of the population and 56 percent of the richest quintile of the population use them. The KWC’s poor performance, particularly Urban Rural due to inadequate collection of bills and network Source: Access figures calculated by AICD using data 2009 DHS data. losses, also holds back service expansion. The KWC fares poorly when its performance is compared to regional benchmarks. Nonrevenue water, at 40 percent of production, is twice that of a well-performing utility. At 90 connections per employee, labor productivity is less than half the average productivity of a utility in middle-income countries, which is 200 connections per employee. On average, Sudan’s water utilities recover only 62 percent of the total billing, which is comparable to the revenue collection of utilities in resource-rich countries, but is a very poor track record in absolute terms. Finally, cost-recovery tariffs are not in place, creating a constant financial drain. The poor performance can be quantified as a percentage of revenue, giving a sense of the hidden costs attached to such inefficiencies. Sufficient data were available to quantify these hidden costs for the KWC as well for one other provincial utility in Sudan: the South Darfur Water Corporation. The KWC emerges at the more inefficient of the two. Overall, the utilities lose between 80 and 120 percent of their revenues. The main drivers of these losses are collection inefficiencies, followed by distributional losses. The inefficiencies in Sudan’s utilities are slightly lower than several East African countries (Kenya and Ethiopia) that lose up to 150 percent of their revenues due to hidden costs (figure 16), but are still very high in absolute terms, amounting to $73 million a year. 25 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 16. Hidden costs of selected water utilities, as percentage of revenue Khartoum Water Corporation South Darfur Water Corporation Kenya Ethiopia Sudan (Average 2005) Tanzania Uganda 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Percentage of revenues Losses Underpricing Collection Inefficiencies Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009). The valuation of these hidden costs helps identify the individual challenges faced by Sudanese utilities. Collection inefficiencies are leading concerns for the South Darfur Water Corporation and the Khartoum Water Corporation. The underlying observable performance indicators are presented in table 11. Table 11. Operational indicators for water utilities in Sudan, 2005 Water Total delivered Average Average Total hidden hidden (million System Collection total cost effective tariff costs ($ costs (% Utility m3/year) losses (%) ratio (%) ($/m3) ($/m3) million/year) revenues ) Khartoum Water Corp 250 40 62 0.68 0.59 73 122 South Darfur Water Corp 7 49 49 0.89 1.13 3 87 Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009). Note: For Sudan water delivered (million m3/year) and total hidden costs ($/year) are reported as the sum of the utilities; the other indicators are calculated as weighted averages. Average total cost per cubic meter was calculated assuming a unit capital cost of 40 cents. 26 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Energy Figure 17. Power infrastructure in Sudan Source: AICD. 27 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Achievements Installed electricity generation capacity in Sudan tripled between 2005 and 2007. Sudan’s Table 12. Relatively high usage of modern fuels for cooking in Sudan installed capacity increased from 801 MW (AICD 2005) in 2005 to around 2,687 MW in 2009 Usage of modern fuels (Platts 2009).6 Compared to its African peers, All households Richest households Sudan’s installed capacity far exceeds what low- Sudan (2009) 36.10 64.90 income countries have put in place but lags Kenya (2003) 3.45 16.52 behind that of resource-rich countries. In 2005 Nigeria (2003) 1.19 5.51 around 70 percent of the electricity was generated Uganda (2001) 0.87 4.34 via thermal generation and around 20 percent Ethiopia (2005) 0.31 1.48 using hydropower resources. But the composition South Sudan (2009) 0.30 0.80 mix seems to have changed since 2005; with the Tanzania (2005) 0.24 1.22 construction of new hydropower plants, the Source: World Bank 2010b and c DHS various years. generation mix has now shifted to 55 percent hydropower and 45 percent thermal. The National Energy Corporation (NEC) enjoys healthy bill collection. The utility reports that all of the billings are routinely collected by the utility. These rates are higher than all other African peer groups (table 13). Sudan boasts a relatively high use of modern fuels (gas and electricity) for cooking relative to its African peers. Around 36 percent of Sudan’s population uses modern fuels for cooking compared to 1 percent of resource-rich Nigeria’s population. Over 65 percent of Sudan’s richest quintile use modern fuels for cooking relative to 6 percent in Nigeria and 16 percent in Kenya (see table 12). Even 8 percent of the poorest quintile of the population used modern fuels. Challenges Electricity access rates, at around 37 percent of the population, are still low relative to most of Sudan’s resource-rich peers. The figure is more or less comparable to that of African low-income countries, however. Over 52 percent of urban areas have access to electricity compared to 28 percent of rural areas. Rural electrification is broadly comparable with other parts of Africa, but urban electrification lags significantly. There is a difference of over 25 percentage points between access to power in urban areas in Sudan and in other resource-rich countries in Africa. Inadequate power access retards business activity, with the challenge being more acute in some areas than others. Though firms reporting that power is not widely available varied from 25 to 60 percent, state to state, across all states firms identified power to be a major problem. This challenge is particularly acute in the Nyala region, where around 60 percent of firms say inadequate power constrains business activity (figure 18a). Power outages in Sudan, at 19 days per year, greatly impact productive activity and exceed those found among the country’s resource-rich and low-income peers. 6 Based on the estimate that around 97 percent of all parts of Sudan’s power is in Sudan. 28 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 13. Benchmarking power indicators in Sudan Low-income, Middle- Resource- nonfragile income rich Indicators Units Sudan countries countries countries Access to electricity (national) % of population 36.5 33 50 46 Access to electricity (urban) % of population 52 86 72.8 79.4 Access to electricity (rural) % of population 28 12.7 26.3 28 Installed generation capacity MW 2,712 651 36,971 4,105 Installed generation capacity per million population MW per million population 80 20 799 43 Power outages Days/year 10.4 5.9 14.5 Firms that find power a constraint for business % of firms 52 31 56 Firms with own generator % of firms 41 41 18 63 Collection rate % billing 100 92 91 70 Revenue per unit US cents/ kWh 9 14 13 13 System losses % of generation 22 24 20 52 Other Effective power tariff Sudan Predominantly hydro countries Residential at 100 kWh US cents/kWh 0.09 10.27 Commercial at 100 kWh US cents/kWh 11.73 5.0–10.0 Industrial at 50,000 kWh US cents/kWh 11.39 Average effective tariff US cents/kWh 9 8 15 12.6 Source: All data unless specified are for 2005 and based on AICD calculations; data for access to electricity for Sudan are from 2009 and were obtained from the US Energy Information Administration (EIA); data for South Sudan access to electricity are from 2010 and were obtained from World Bank (2011); data for installed capacity for Sudan are from 2009 and were obtained from Platts (2009); data for power outages ere derived from Vennemo and Rosnes (2009); data for Emergency Generation from Eberhard and others (2008); data for firms that find power to be a constraint and firms with own generators are from 2007 and were obtained from World Bank (2009b); data on Sudan collection rate, revenue per unit, and system losses are for 2004 and were taken from World Bank (2007); data for average effective tariff for Sudan are for 2004 and taken from World Bank (2007); data for average effective tariff for South Sudan are taken from World Bank (2011). For the thermal benchmark, data represent primarily residential users. Note: Access to electricity data for Sudan are estimates based on calculations from the AICD economic model for power investment needs. Installed capacity per million population was calculated based on Platts (2009) estimates for installed capacity. * The aggregate is based on manufacturing firms. Excessive reliance on generators to cope with erratic and unreliable power supply increases production costs and reduces competitiveness. A significant share of manufacturing enterprises (from 36 percent in North Kordofan to 96 percent in Red Sea) share or own generators. The share of electricity consumption produced by generators in these states was 66 percent and 72 percent, respectively. Apart from increasing costs and reducing competitiveness, investment in these generators also holds up a significant amount of resources that could have been used for other fixed assets or to lower working capital constraints of most of the businesses (World Bank 2009b). Given erratic supply and high reliance on backup generators, industrial and commercial consumers account for only around 30 percent of electric utility consumption (figure 19). Consumption of power for agricultural uses is around 5 percent, and the rest of the consumption is primarily by domestic consumers. In contrast, billing patterns (as a proxy for consumption) in South Africa suggest that industrial and commercial consumers account for 92 percent of all billings, and residential consumers for only 8 percent. 29 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 18a. Electricity is the largest obstacle to doing Figure 18b. High reliance on generators for power business in Sudan 120 Perception that electricity is the biggest onstable to doing business (% of firms) 100 80 60 40 20 0 North river Nile Khartoum Gezira Nyala Red Sea River Nile Khartoum North Kordofan Gazira Nyala Red Sea Kordofan % of firms that own generator % of power from generator Source: Derived from World Bank (2009b). Figure 19. A small share of Sudan’s power consumption is for industrial activities Source: Based on statistical handbooks produced by the Central Bureau of Statistics and on data reported by the NEC, which are assumed to reflect the situation in Sudan. Power prices are toward the lower-middle end of the range observed in Sub-Saharan Africa. At $0.09 per kilowatt-hour (kWh), the price is close to the average of countries predominantly reliant on hydropower. Nevertheless, given that thermal power has been dominant until quite recently and continues to play a significant role, tariffs look low relative to historic costs of around $0.19/kWh (figure 20). The costs of producing power are marginally higher than the average cost of power production in Africa. The average power production cost in Sudan, at $0.19/kWh, is slightly more than that of Sub- Saharan Africa’s, which is around $0.18/kWh (figure 21). The costs are partially offset by generous government subsidies to the power utility. In 2003 and 2004 the government of Sudan provided subsidies valued at around $60 million. While there are no data available for later years, it is believed that the power utility continues to receive these subsides from the government. The end user ultimately pays less than half of what it costs to produce the power. 30 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 20. Moderate power tariffs in Sudan 50 45 40 US cents per KWh 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 Liberia Chad Ghana Senegal Mali Ethiopia Malawi Mozambique South Africa Lesotho Uganda North Sudan Botswana Benin Nigeria Burkina Faso Cape Verde Cote d'Ivoire Kenya Cameroon Tanzania Zimbabwe DRC Madagascar Rwanda Namibia South Sudan Zambia Niger Congo, Rep. Source: Briceño-Garmendia and Shkaratan 2009; World Bank 2007; World Bank 2011. Note: South Sudan’s price is the median of its price range of 18–29 cents. DRC = Democratic Republic of Congo. Figure 21. Benchmarking historic power production costs in Sudan Benin Rwanda Sierra Leone 2009/10 Tanzania Mozambique Zimbabwe Malawi Ethiopia Zambia South Africa Botswana Namibia Lesotho DRC Cape Verde Kenya North Sudan Uganda Madagascar Sierra Leone (2001-07) Mali Niger Congo Cameroon Burkina Faso Chad Ghana Senegal Cote d'Ivoire Nigeria Source: Briceño-Garmendia and Shkaratan 2009; World Bank 2007; World Bank 2011. Note: DRC = Democratic Republic of Congo. In spite of the generous subsidies received from the government, the NEC reported large financial losses. The utility lost $12 million each year in 2003 and 2004, $0.02–$0.03 per unit of electricity sold. Even the 10 percent increase in power sales from the previous year did not stabilize the financial performance of the NEC. Hidden costs diverted significant resources from the utility, causing economic losses of almost $500 million ($484 million) in 2008 Underpricing is one major problem—the $0.09 per kilowatt-hour tariff recovers only 50 percent of the $0.18 required to produce a kilowatt-hour. Despite subsidization, this underpricing added almost $380 million to the NEC’s 2008 losses. Network losses were around 22 percent in 2008. Though generally consistent with what most African utilities encounter, losses of this magnitude are double international best-practice standards. Network losses contributed $106 million to the NEC’s 2008 financial losses (table 14). 31 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 14. Operational indicators for the NEC System Implicit Average total Average Total hidden Total hidden Net generation losses collection ratio cost effective tariff costs costs (GWh/year) (%) (%) ($/kWh) ($/kWh) ($ million/year) (% revenues) 2003 3,560 34.8 100 0.16 0.08 306 175 2004 3,749 33.4 100 0.16 0.09 293 129 2005 4,124 26 100 — — _ — 2006 4,521 24 100 0.16 0.092 340 96 2007 5,021 22 100 0.20 0.092 528 113 2008 5,506 22 100 0.19 0.098 484 96 Source: AICD analysis based on World Bank (2007) and Sudan Central Bureau of Statistical Handbooks. — = Not available. Some progress has been made, however. Hidden costs as a share of utility revenue fell substantially from 175 percent of NEC’s revenues in 2003 to 96 percent in 2008 (figure 22). This is largely attributable to significant reduction in network losses, which were as high as 35 percent in 2003 but were reduced to 22 percent by 2008. While tariffs have risen slightly, they have not kept pace with the rising costs of production Nevertheless, a 60 percent expansion of power production all sold at a loss, has inflated absolute hidden costs from $306 million in 2003 to $484 million in 2008 Expressed in terms of the size of the economy, these hidden costs shaved off 2.2 percent of GDP in 2003, falling to 1.5 percent of GDP in 2008. Figure 22. Large hidden costs at the NEC due to underpricing and unaccounted losses 200 180 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2003 2004 2006 2007 2008 Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009) using data from World Bank (2007) and Sudan Central Bureau of Statistics handbooks. The NEC’s hidden costs look high when compared to that of other African utilities (figure 23). They represent about 100 percent of the NEC’s revenues and are double that of the top-performing countries such as Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, and Benin. Nevertheless, they are far from being the worst in Africa. 32 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 23. Hidden costs are high in Sudan relative to other African countries 300 250 Percentage of revenues 200 150 100 50 0 Nigeria South Liberia Niger Mali Ghana Sudan Burkina Cote Benin Cape Senegal South Sudan Faso d'Ivoire Verde Africa Collection Inefficiencies Underpricing Losses Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009); Sudan Central Bureau of Statistics handbooks. In the long run, Sudan’s power cost-recovery situation looks a little more promising, particularly if the nation’s hydropower potential is developed. Using a model that simulates optimal (least-cost) strategies for generating, transmitting, and distributing electricity in response to demand increases, it is estimated that the long-run marginal costs of producing power in Sudan would be about $0.13/kWh when all cost-effective power strategies are fully developed. Although this is well below the historic cost of around $0.19/kWh, it is still significantly above the current tariff of $0.09/kWh. Thus, there is a need to continue raising the tariff toward these long-term equilibrium levels (figure 24). Figure 24. Existing tariffs for power are insufficient to recover huge operating costs and long-run marginal costs 20 15 10 5 0 - Existing total Long run Existing Effective tariff Average Existing capital cost marginal Cost operating cost revenue cost Source: AICD calculations. Sudan’s rich endowment of hydropower resources could make it a significant exporter of hydropower in the Nile Basin region. To meet its potential, Sudan would need to develop more than 3,100 MW of hydropower capacity beyond its domestic needs, which would represent a doubling of capacity. The nation would also need to develop around 13,500 MW of interconnector capacity, the largest of any country in the region. 33 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Deepening power trade would save the Eastern Africa Power Pool–Nile Basin (EAPP-NB) around $1 billion in energy costs. Even though Sudan and Ethiopia have to make the lion’s share of the investments, these will offset the high costs of thermal generation, which is currently the main source of generation in the EAPP. Expanding capacity and investing in interconnectors will allow Sudan to gain a substantial 12 percent per year return on the investment. Moreover, by increasing the share of hydropower in the regional generation portfolio, the region could save several million tonnes of carbon emissions a year. Under trade expansion, Sudan’s weight of hydropower increased from 73 to 87 percent, making the generation of power less carbon intensive. Information and communication technology Figure 25. Sudan’s ICT backbone infrastructure as of the mid-2000s Source: AICD. Note: The figure captures the situation in Sudan in the mid-2000s, when the mobile signal coverage was not as high. Today, this situation has significantly improved. 34 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Achievements All parts of Sudan have made impressive progress in the ICT sector since the early 2000s, placing access and service penetration rates on par with African peers. In the early 2000s, only around 60 percent of the population was covered by a GSM7 signal. As of 2010, over 80 percent of the population is covered by a GSM signal. Mobile subscription rates have risen from less than 1 percent in 2000 to 33 percent in 2009. Growth in mobile telephony has been impressive and Sudan’s is among the most rapidly growing in Africa. Until recently, most of the development in the sector was in the northern part of Sudan .Only a few other countries in East Africa—Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda—have achieved mobile penetration of around 20 percent or more. Internet penetration has also grown significantly but slightly lags behind resource-rich and middle-income African countries. International bandwidth in all parts of Sudan has grown exponentially and exceeds all benchmarks except middle-income countries. The landline sector has not demonstrated much growth, meanwhile, in part because of an overwhelming preference for mobile phones. This trend is broadly consistent across Africa as a whole. Table 15. All parts of Sudan compare favorably to the average African country in terms of ICT access and prices Resource- Low- Middle- Sub- rich income income Saharan All parts of Sudan countries countries countries Africa Indicator Unit 2000 2008 2008 2008 2008 2008 Access % population under 60 80 78 63 96 72 GSM coverage signal International bandwidth Bits/person 0.06 35 18 25 209 39 Internet Users/100 people 0.1 5.9 9 3.5 7 5.5 Landline Subscribers/100 people 1.2 1.09 0.9 0.8 9.2 1.4 Mobile phone Subscribers/100 people 0.05 33 38.2 24.4 95.3 33.1 Prices 2008 2009 2008 2008 2008 2008 Price of monthly mobile basket US $ 4.8 3 17.07 11 9.24 12.06 Price of monthly fixed-line basket US $ 4.4 5.3 15.12 10.43 11.41 12.38 Price of monthly fixed broadband US $ 47 25 231.98 286.72 57.42 208.71 Price of a call to the United States per minute US $ 0.42 0.92 0.69 0.56 0.7 Price of an inter-Africa call per minute US $ 0.42 1.16 0.94 1.06 0.99 Source: Adapted from Minges and others 2009 using data from the Central Bureau of Statistics, Sudatel, Zain, and World Bank ICT At-a- Glance. Source: Data for landline subscribers is for 2005 taken from the Central Bureau of Statistics, South Sudan; Mobile phone subscriptions based on World Bank staff estimates for 2011; Note: Landline and mobile subscriber data are based on information from Sudan; the others are based on Sudan aggregates. These are representative of Sudan because until recently South Sudan did not have access to adequate ICT services. Most of the ICT connectivity existed only in Sudan. Analysis of 2006 data for all parts of Sudan suggests that almost 98 percent of the population could access mobile telephony on a commercially viable basis (figure 26). This result is based on the assumption that 4 percent of local income in each area could be captured as revenue for voice telephony 7 Global system for mobile communications. 35 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE services. The gap in universal access to telephony can be closed relatively easily for Sudan on a commercial basis. A small subsidy could aid in reaching the uncovered 2 percent of the population. For broadband infrastructure, simulations present an optimistic picture. Around 96 percent of all parts of Sudan’s population could gain access to limited performance WIMAX8 broadband infrastructure on a commercially viable basis. A gap of 3 to 4 percent exists in the northwest region of all parts of Sudan— primarily a desert—and in the south (figure 27) Figure 26. A small subsidy could have closed the mobile telephony coverage gap in all parts of Sudan 100% 90% 80% Percent of population 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% South Africa Ghana Nigeria Benin Côte d’Ivoire Sudan Malawi Burkina Faso Ethiopia Tanzania Lesotho Mali Chad Niger Congo-DRC Senegal Cameroon Madagascar Existing access Efficient Market Gap Coverage gap Source: Mayer and others 2009. The advent of undersea fiber-optic cables has enabled Sudan to develop a strong ICT infrastructure backbone (figure 26). Three undersea cable systems land in Port Sudan: SAS-1 (providing a direct link to Saudi Arabia), Flag Falcon, and, most recently, the Eastern Africa Submarine Cable System (EASSy). In addition, there are terrestrial links to Egypt and Ethiopia and a 10,000 km domestic fiber backbone (Sudatel 2009). The EASSy has established a landing station in Sudan. Significant private investment has facilitated Sudan’s fiber-optic connectivity. Sudan needs to establish overland connections to the cable to complete the national ICT backbone The emergence of competition in gateways as a result of connectivity to the undersea cable has facilitated very attractive prices for ICT services in Sudan—among the most attractive in Sub-Saharan Africa. Sudan pays a third of what resource-rich countries pay and a fourth of what low-income countries pay for the mobile basket. Landline telephony, which has not experienced any growth, has also seen its prices slashed. But prices for fixed broadband are the most striking. In 2005 all parts of Sudan paid 10 percent of what resource-rich countries paid for their ICT services and 8 percent of what low-income countries paid (table 15). 8 Worldwide interoperability for microwave access. 36 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 27. The voice telephony gap could easily have been filled in Sudan Source: Mayer and others 2009. Evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa suggests that access to the submarine cable has generally reduced costs of ICT services when international gateways are present (table 16). Sudan has established competition in its international data gateways and partial competition in its international long-distance gateway. The pricing of ICT services, particularly Internet-access prices, reflects the emergence of competitive gateways (table 15). Prices to call within the region are consistent with those of other countries that have established competition in international long distance, and are half what resource-rich and low-income countries pay in general. Prices to call the United States are half what low-income and resource-rich countries pay on average (table 15), but are double those of countries that have established competitive gateways (table 16). Table 16. Prices of Internet and phone calls in Sub-Saharan Africa, with and without access to submarine cables $ Call within Call to the Internet Internet ADSL region United States dial-up Without submarine cable 1.34 0.86 68 283 With submarine cable 0.57 0.48 47 111 Monopoly on international gateway 0.70 0.72 37 120 Competitive international gateway 0.48 0.23 37 98 Source: AICD calculations. Note: ADSL = asymmetric digital subscriber line. Sudan has made impressive strides in liberalizing its ICT markets and now boasts one of the most liberalized markets in Africa. The original National Telecommunication Authority has been dissected into two core competencies. The National Telecommunication Corporation (NTC), the industry regulator, was established in 2001 and took on the function of regulation and supervision. The provision of ICT services was licensed to private operators. One operator, Sudatel, was established in 1994 as a public company and subsequently floated on the regional stock market. The government owns around 21 percent of the 37 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE company and the rest is owned by other private entities. Shares in Sudatel have been available to the public since 1997 and are traded on several Middle Eastern stock markets. Sudatel is also a strategic investor in its own right, with operations in Mauritania and Senegal as well as Ghana and Nigeria. Now there are two fixed-line operators (Sudatel and Canar) and three nationwide GSM mobile operators (Sudatel, MTN, and Zain), which also operate in South Sudan. By establishing a universal service fund, Sudan is garnering funds to expand service coverage to economically unviable rural areas. Effective from 2009, mobile network operators pay 2 percent of their gross revenues into a universal access fund, plus $0.87 per customer per year. Proceeds from the fund are expected to be used to subsidize rollouts in otherwise economically unfeasible rural areas (Lange 2010). Financing Sudan’s infrastructure To meet its most pressing needs, Sudan has to significantly improve infrastructure in key areas. For the purpose of this report, illustrative targets have been set using standardized criteria and assuming a time horizon of 10 years to meet the targets. For example, it is reasonable to assume that the water and sanitation Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) can be attained using a mix of technological options. Similarly, targets for increasing electrification assume, at least, doubling the current access rates, which in one case implies reaching 55 percent of the population on average. In the case of transport, national connectivity involves connecting centers with populations larger than 25,000 people. This translates into a need for 5,372 km of road in good condition in the north (table 17). Table 17. Illustrative investment targets for infrastructure in Sudan Sector Economic targets Social targets ICT Install fiber-optic links to neighboring capitals and submarine cable. Provide universal access to GSM Add 26,900 base stations for urban and 41,204 base stations for rural. signal and public broadband facilities. Power Assuming trade stagnation, estimate optimal (least-cost) investment strategies for Raise electrification from 37 to 55 generating, transmitting, and distributing electricity in response to demand increases. percent of population (100 percent Achieve exogenously determined electrification rates. urban, 30 percent rural). Develop 440 MW of new generation capacity (no trade scenario). This scenario could be replaced under trade expansion with 2,200 MW of generation capacity and the needed megawatts in interconnectors. Transport Achieve regional (national) connectivity across Sudan with good-quality 2-lane (1- Provide urban road access within 500 lane) paved road. square meters. Provide rural road access to 100 percent of the highest-value agricultural land based on current production, plus providing rural road access to 50 percent of the nonproductive agricultural land with highest potential. Add or rehabilitate roads to have the following number of kilometers in good condition: 5,372 km for national connectivity, 2,893 km for regional connectivity, 4,226 km in urban areas, and 34,200 km in rural areas. Water Increase population with access to improved water to 72 percent of the population and Achieve Millennium Development access to improved sanitation to 76 percent of the population. Goals by preserving the current mix of Target technology mix for improved water: sanitation technological options and Piped water (23% urban, 0% rural), standposts (52% urban, 12% rural), safe wells clearing the sector rehabilitation (25% urban, 88% rural). backlog. Source: Mayer and others 2009; Rosnes and Vennemo 2009; Carruthers, Krishnamani, and Murray 2009; You and others 2009. 38 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Sudan would need to spend $4.2 billion a year—or 20 percent of its GDP—over the next decade to meet infrastructure targets (table 18). After South Africa and Nigeria, these are the largest infrastructure spending needs for any Sub-Saharan African country. They are broadly comparable to the needs faced by the Democratic Republic of Congo and Ethiopia. As explained earlier, the massive needs are driven by the initial starting conditions and are based on reasonable assumptions regarding what outputs are attainable. The estimates are conspicuously large (i) because the land area of the country is massive, with large pockets of uninhabited terrain, and (ii) because of the low starting point, particularly in the water and transport sectors. Table 18. Indicative infrastructure spending needs in Sudan, 2006–15 US$ million per year Sector Operations and Total needs as Capital expenditure Total needs maintenance share of GDP ICT 267 43 310 1.45 Irrigation — — — — Power (nontrade) 320 104 424 1.98 Transport 1,295 490 1,785 8.35 Water supply and sanitation 1,422 280 1,701 7.97 Total 3,303 917 4,220 19.8 Source: Mayer and others 2008; Rosnes and Vennemo 2009; Carruthers, Krishnamani, and Murray 2009; You and others, AICD 2009. Derived from models available online at www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/models. Note: ICT = information and communication technology. — = Not available The transport and the water and sanitation sectors have the highest financing needs. About $1.8 billion would be needed to provide minimum surface connectivity and around $1.7 billion would be needed each year to meet the MDGs for water and sanitation. Particularly in the water network, decades of war have created an enormous rehabilitation backlog. For example, 40 percent of rural water assets and 42 percent of urban water assets need rehabilitation for Sudan as a whole. Transport needs are largely driven by the need to maintain regional corridors and upgrade existing rural tracks to make them usable. A distant second are the needs for power, at $424 million. The spending needs estimates assume that only the power infrastructure needed to meet domestic demand is developed. The estimates would be substantially higher if the development of power export potential were also considered—that is, if Sudan were also to fully develop its 3,000 MW of hydropower export potential, a further $1.1 billion would be needed annually to develop additional capacity and interconnectors. Needs estimates for ICT, at $310 million a year, are the lowest among the sectors. This is because of the recent ICT boom, which has largely been financed by the private sector. While an undersea cable is accessible via Port Sudan, overland connections to the cable need to be financed to complete the national ICT backbone. At 20 percent of GDP, Sudan’s needs are twice as high as other resource-rich economies in Africa and broadly comparable to those of low-income countries such as Kenya, Senegal, and Madagascar (figure 28). These needs in terms of the economy’s size are strikingly high given the recent oil influx and revamping of infrastructure investments. New investments account for over three-quarters of total needs 39 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE and are around 15 percent of GDP—roughly equivalent to what China has been investing on its own domestic infrastructure development in recent years. Figure 28. Sudan’s infrastructure spending needs in the regional context, as share of GDP Estimated infrastructure spending needed to meet targets, as percentage of GDP Source: Foster and Briceño-Garmendia 2009. Note: Values excludes irrigation. LIC = low-income country; MIC = middle-income country; COMESA = Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa; GDP = gross domestic product; O&M = operations and maintenance; CAPEX = capital expenditure. Sudan already spends a sizable amount—$1.5 billion per year, or 7 percent of GDP—to meet its infrastructure needs (table 19). In terms of the economy’s size, the aggregates are comparable to what middle-income countries spend and perhaps slightly higher than what other resource-rich countries spend (figure 29). About 60 percent of the total infrastructure spending is allocated to capital expenses and 40 percent to operating expenditures. Operating expenditure is entirely covered from budgetary resources and payments by infrastructure users. The composition of financiers indicates that Sudan has been able to capitalize on the interest of non–Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) investors and the private sector. Table 19. Financial flows to Sudan’s infrastructure, average 2001 to 2005 O&M Capital expenditure Total Total $ millions per year Public Public Non-OECD Total spending as ODA PPI spending sector sector financiers CAPEX share of GDP ICT 4 5 0 35 209 249 253 1.18 Power 281.9 104 0 304 0 409 690 3.23 Transport 282.0 183 22 22 0 227 509 2.38 WSS 2 6 12 5 7 31 32 0.15 Total 570 298 35 366 215 915 1,485 6.95 Source: Derived from Foster and Briceño-Garmendia (2009). Note: O&M = operations and maintenance; ODA = official development assistance; PPI = private participation in infrastructure; CAPEX = capital expenditure; OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; WSS = water supply and sanitation; ICT = information and communication technology; GDP = gross domestic product. 40 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Figure 29. Sudan’s current infrastructure spending is average by African standards Source: Foster and Briceño-Garmendia 2009. Note: Values excludes irrigation. LIC = low-income country; MIC = middle-income country; COMESA = Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa; GDP = gross domestic product; O&M = operations and maintenance; CAPEX = capital expenditure. The largest single financier of infrastructure investment is China, followed by Indian and Arab investors. Together they account for 40 percent of total annual investments, almost entirely allocated to the power sector. China’s partnership with Sudan in infrastructure development dates back to 2001, with cumulative total financing commitments on the order of $2 billion in 2010. Sudan benefits from a $3 billion framework agreement signed in December 2007, one of the largest to have been accorded to any African country to date. Chinese projects are providing some 2,200 MW of new thermal power generation, and the country is responsible for the now-completed 1,250 MW Merowe Dam and associated 1,800 km transmission line. China has also been involved in the reconstruction of some 1,500 km of roads (table 20). Sudanese federal and state Table 20. Identified infrastructure projects financed by non-OECD governments and state-owned enterprises financiers (SOEs) account for an additional third of Project Sudan infrastructure investments, and US$ million costs have focused on transport and to some China 949 extent power. The remaining capital Construction of 300 MW gas-fired power plant in Al-Fulah 518 funding comes from the private sector, Construction of the El-Gaili Combined Cycle Power Plant, Phase 1 150 which, as in most of the rest of Africa, NEC transition line 81 supports the ICT boom. ODA flows have White Nile electricity network 200 played a very small role in capital China and Arab countries 1,200 infrastructure financing. Construction of the Merowe hydroelectric dam (1,250 MW) 1,200 India 475 Capital investments in Sudan are Setting up 4x125 MW Kosti Combined Cycle Power Plant 475 heavily skewed toward the power sector, Total 2,624 much of this funded by China. Investment Source: Foster, etc (2009). Calculations based on World Bank-PPIAF Chinese levels in ICT and transport are comparable project database. (http://ppi.worldbank.org), in current $ millions . 41 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE in magnitude, with the former sourced largely from the private sector and the latter from the public sector. Investments in water and sanitation are absent. Figure 30. Sudan’s pattern of capital investment in infrastructure and that of comparator countries Investment in infrastructure sectors as percentage of GDP, by source 2.5 Sudan 2.0 Resource Rich Percentage of GDP 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 ICT Power Transport WSS ICT Power Transport WSS Public ODA Non-OECD Private Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009). Note: Private investment includes self-financing by households. ODA = official development assistance; OECD = Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development; ICT = information and communication technology; GDP = gross domestic product; WSS = water supply and sanitation; LIC = low-income country. How much more can be done within the existing resource envelope? Even without increasing spending, additional resources could be directed toward infrastructure by eliminating inefficiencies. This report quantifies some operational inefficiencies based on measurable and observable performance indicators. The first type relates to operators and/or infrastructure providers, including utilities, SOEs, and special funds. For this type of estimate, providers within Sudan will be compared against well-functioning utilities in Africa and/or engineering norms. These comparisons will cover (i) underrecovery of costs: comparing effective tariffs and user fees against actual unit costs of providing the service; (ii) overstaffing: assessing the difference between average labor cost per connection of the utility evaluated against a well-functioning utility; (iii) distribution losses: assessing the difference between distribution of losses of the evaluated system against engineering norms for a system of similar age and characteristics; and (iv) undercollection: assessing the ability of the operator to collect bills within the year against a standard of full revenue collection. In addition, the analysis measures the ability of governmental agencies to execute their budget allocations for capital projects within the fiscal year. The analysis suggests that Sudan can recover $584 million each year by reducing inefficiencies in the system (table 21). Most of the efficiency gains are associated with aligning tariffs to cost-recovery levels and reducing distribution losses in both the water and power systems. Increasing tariffs to cost-recovery levels could save $378 million in power and $15 million in water sectors annually. Distributional losses in power cost $106 million per year, and another $27 million in the water sector. Undercollection of bills for water services could save a significant $35 million. Finally, budget underexecution is a significant issue in the transport sector, leading to underspending of about $20 million of available funds annually. 42 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Table 21. Sudan’s potential gains from greater operational efficiency Total as share US$ million ICT Irrigation Power Transport WSS Total of GDP Underrecovery of costs — n.a. 378 n.a. 15 393 1.84 Overstaffing n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Distribution losses — n.a. 106 — 27 133 0.62 Undercollection — n.a. 0 n.a. 35 35 0.17 Low budget execution 0 n.a. 0 20 2 22 0.10 Total 0 n.a. 484 20 79 584 2.73 Source: Derived from Foster and Briceño-Garmendia (2009). Note: WSS = water supply and sanitation; ICT = information and communication technology; GDP = gross domestic product. — = Not available. n.a. = Not applicable. The power sector offers the largest potential savings—up to $584 million per year—if the operational inefficiencies of its utility were tackled. Undercharging for power costs Sudan about $380 million each year, or around 1.8 percent of the country’s GDP. If compared with the rest of Africa, where underpricing of power is commonplace, the National Power Corporation of Sudan (NEC) is doing better than utilities in other resource-rich countries on average, but is nevertheless a poor performer (figure 31). Figure 31. Underpricing of power and water in Sudan Financial burden of underpricing, as percentage of GDP 2.0 Percenatage of GDP 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 Power Water Sudan Resource Rich Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009). The NEC’s 2004 distributional losses of 33.4 percent are three times the best-practice 10 percent benchmark, resulting in a staggering $106 million cost of inefficiencies. In the water sector, average tariffs stand at $0.6 per cubic meter versus an estimated $0.69 per cubic meter average cost-recovery tariff. The macroeconomic burden of 0.007 percent of GDP is much lower than that for power, but is comparatively higher than that of other resource-rich countries. Operational inefficiencies are also plaguing the water sector, and cost Sudan about $62 million a year, equivalent to 0.3 percent of GDP. This cost could be avoided by increasing the collection efficiency for 43 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE water services and reducing nonrevenue water. In the water sector, the burden of operational utility inefficiencies is considerably higher than for the benchmark countries (figure 32). Figure 32. The burden of inefficiency in Sudan’s power and water utilities a. Uncollected bills and unaccounted losses in the power sector, as a b. Uncollected bills and unaccounted losses in the water sector, as a percentage of GDP percentage of GDP 0.700 0.35 Percenatage of GDP Percenatage of GDP 0.600 0.30 0.500 0.25 0.400 0.20 0.300 0.15 0.200 0.10 0.100 0.05 0.000 0.00 Sudan Resource rich Sudan Resource rich Collection inefficiencies Unaccounted losses Collection inefficiencies Unaccounted losses Source: Derived from Briceño-Garmendia, Smits, and Foster (2009). Annual funding gap Sudan’s annual infrastructure funding gap amounts to $2.9 billion per year, or roughly 14 percent of GDP (table 22). The largest funding gap is in the water and sanitation sector, followed closely by transport. Given strong private investment, only a small funding gap remains in ICT. In the case of power, existing spending is sufficient. But if power tariffs could be raised to cost-recovery levels, much more of this expenditure could be funded internally, freeing up external finance for other critically needed areas. Table 22. Funding gaps by sector Total as US$ million ICT Irrigation Power Transport WSS Total share of GDP Spending needs (310) — (424) (1,785) (1,701) (4,220) (19.8) Existing spending* 253 424 509 32 1,218 5.7 Reallocation potential within sectors 0 0 0 0 0 Efficiency gains 0 484 20 79 584 2.7 Funding gap (57) — (1,255) (1,590) (2,902) (13.6) Reallocation potential across 0 267 0 0 267 1.2 sectors Source: Derived from Foster and Briceño-Garmendia (2009). Note: Estimates use the base scenario of spending needs. Potential overspending across sectors is not included in the calculation of the funding gap, because it cannot be assumed that it would be applied toward other infrastructure sectors. WSS = water supply and sanitation; ICT = information and communication technology; GDP = gross domestic product. *traced to needs **Assuming complete fungibility across sectors — = Not available. 44 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE What else can be done? Sudan’s funding gap is large relative to the size of its economy, and enormous with respect to its current level of spending. Nevertheless, there are a number of options that could make it more manageable, including raising additional finance, taking additional cost-cutting measures, and lengthening the period of time allotted for meeting the illustrative infrastructure targets. In any case, given the magnitude of the gap, difficult decisions will have to be taken regarding the prioritization of the different investments. There are realistic prospects for increasing the flow of resources to infrastructure. Although not all components of the required infrastructure platform are suitable for private finance (particularly roads, water, and sanitation), other components may be (for example, ICT, power generation, and ports). Challenges for attracting private investors are conspicuous particularly due to the country risks linked to the instability of the country, repeated violations of the rule of law, and the very poor ranking of Sudan’s governance compared to its peers in Africa. Sudan has captured private investment commitments worth around 1 percent of its GDP, predominantly in the ICT sector. Many other African countries have done significantly better in this area (figure 33). Countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Nigeria, Uganda, Kenya, and Senegal have all captured between 1.8 and 2.5 percent of GDP, while the most successful country in this regard—Guinea-Bissau—has captured in excess of 3.0 percent of GDP. Figure 33. Many African countries capture more private investment than Sudan 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 % GDP 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 Power ICT Source: PPI Project Database. (http://ppi.worldbank.org), in current $ millions. Adopting lower-cost technologies could substantially reduce the cost of meeting the posited infrastructure targets, and help make the funding gap manageable. Meeting the MDGs for water supply and sanitation with lower-cost technologies than previously used (such as stand posts, boreholes, and improved latrines), could reduce the associated price tag from $1,701 million to $889 million each year. Similarly, meeting transport connectivity standards using lower-cost road-surfacing technologies (such as single-surface treatment) together with a rural policy that narrows its focus exclusively to provide 100 percent accessibility currently active (as opposed to potential) agricultural land postponing, could reduce 45 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE the associated price tag from $1,785 million to $771 million. The overall savings from these measures would amount to $2 billion for Sudan (table 23). If Sudan were Table 23. Savings from innovation unable to raise Savings as % additional financing or Before After of sector reduce infrastructure $ millions innovation innovation Savings funding gap costs, the only way to WSS appropriate technology 1,701 889 812 51 meet the targets Roads appropriate technology 1,785 1,124 660 53 identified here would be Total 3,486 2,014 1,472 51 to take longer than ten Source: Derived from Foster and Briceño-Garmendia, AICD Flagship Report, 2009 Note: WSS = water supply and sanitation. years to do so. If the country were able to instantly realize all potential efficiency gains while holding spending at current levels, it could meet the identified infrastructure targets within 30 years. These simulations underscore the importance of making progress on the efficiency agenda, which could propel the country forward toward meeting its infrastructure targets. 46 Bibliography and references This country report draws upon a wide range of papers, databases, models, and maps that were created as part of the Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic. All of these can be downloaded from the project Web site: www.infrastructureafrica.org. For papers go to the document page (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/documents), for databases to the data page (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/data), for models go to the models page (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/models), and for maps to the map page (www.infrastructureafrica.org/aicd/tools/maps). The references for the papers that were used to compile this country report are provided in the table below. General AICD (Africa Infrastructure Country Diagnostic). Africa’s Infrastructure: A Time for Transformation. www.infrastructureafrica.org. Foster, Vivien, and Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, eds. 2009. Africa’s Infrastructure: A Time for Transformation. Paris and Washington, DC: Agence Française de Développement and World Bank. Financing Briceño-Garmendia, Cecilia, Karlis Smits, and Vivien Foster. 2009. “Financing Public Infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa: Patterns and Emerging Issues.� AICD Background Paper 15, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Growth Calderón, César. 2009. “Infrastructure and Growth in Africa.� Policy Research Working Paper 4914, World Bank, Washington, DC. Escribano, Alvaro, J. Luis Guasch, and Jorge Pena. 2010. “Assessing the Impact of Infrastructure Quality on Firm Productivity in Africa.� Policy Research Working Paper 5191, World Bank, Washington, DC. Yepes, Tito, Justin Pierce, and Vivien Foster. 2009. “Making Sense of Africa’s Infrastructure Endowment: A Benchmarking Approach.� Policy Research Working Paper 4912, World Bank, Washington, DC. SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Information and communication technologies Ampah, Mavis, Daniel Camos, Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, Michael Minges, Maria Shkaratan, and Mark Williams. 2009. “Information and Communications Technology in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Sector Review.� AICD Background Paper 10, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Infoasaid. 2011. Infoasaid Sudan media and telecoms landscape guide. Infoasaid Sudan media and telecoms landscape guide Lange. 2010. Sudan: Telecoms, Mobile Broadband and Forecasts. A Buddecomm report. Bucketty. Mayer, Rebecca, Ken Figueredo, Mike Jensen, Tim Kelly, Richard Green, and Alvaro Federico Barra. 2009. “Connecting the Continent: Costing the Needs for Spending on ICT Infrastructure in Africa.� AICD Background Paper 3, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Sudatel. 2009. Annual Report 2008. http://www.sudatel.sd/extra/annrepots/2008en.pdf . Khartoum. Irrigation Svendsen, Mark, Mandy Ewing, and Siwa Msangi. 2008. “Watermarks: Indicators of Irrigation Sector Performance in Africa.� AICD Background Paper 4, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. You, L., C. Ringler, G. Nelson, U. Wood-Sichra, R. Robertson, S. Wood, G. Zhe, T. Zhu, and Y. Sun. 2009. “Torrents and Trickles: Irrigation Spending Needs in Africa.� AICD Background Paper 9, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Power Briceño-Garmendia and Shkaratan. 2009. Power Tariffs: Caught between Cost Recovery and Affordability. AICD working paper, draft version. Washington DC Eberhard, Anton, Vivien Foster, Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, Fatimata Ouedraogo, Daniel Camos, and Maria Shkaratan. 2008. “Underpowered: The State of the Power Sector in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 6, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. EIA (United States Energy Information Administration). 2009. “Sudan Country Energy Brief 2009.� www.eia.doe.gov/cabs/Sudan/Background.html. Foster, Vivien, and Jevgenijs Steinbuks. 2009. “Paying the Price for Unreliable Power Supplies: In-House Generation of Electricity by Firms in Africa.� Policy Research Working Paper 4913, World Bank, Washington, DC. Platts. 2009. WEPP database Rosnes, Orvika, and Haakon Vennemo. 2009. “Powering Up: Costing Power Infrastructure Spending Needs in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 5, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. 2 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE World Bank. 2007. “Ethiopia Power Export Project Stage 2: Ethiopia-Sudan Interconnector Project.� World Bank Project Appraisal Document, Washington, DC. ———. 2011. “Energy Sector Strategy Note for South Sudan.� Draft note, World Bank, Washington, DC. Transport Arvis, Jean-Francois, Gael Raballand, and Jean-Francois Marteau. 2009. The Cost of Being Landlocked: Logistics Costs and Supply Chain Reliability. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper No. 4258. Washington DC. Bofinger, Heinrich C. 2009. “An Unsteady Course: Growth and Challenges in Africa’s Air Transport Industry.� AICD Background Paper 16, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Bullock, Richard. 2009. “Off Track: Sub-Saharan African Railways.� AICD Background Paper 17, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Carruthers, Robin, Ranga Rajan Krishnamani, and Siobhan Murray. 2009. “Improving Connectivity: Investing in Transport Infrastructure in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 7, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Christ, Nannette, and Michael Ferrantino. 2009. “The Effects of Cost, Time, and Uncertainty in Sub- Saharan Africa.� Draft Paper, U.S. International Trade Commission, Washington, DC. Gwilliam, Ken, Vivien Foster, Rodrigo Archondo-Callao, Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, Alberto Nogales, and Kavita Sethi. 2008. “The Burden of Maintenance: Roads in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 14, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Keer- MISC. 2007. Keer- Misc Logistics Limited. http://www.keer-misc.com Kumar, Ajay, and Fanny Barrett. 2008. “Stuck in Traffic: Urban Transport in Africa.� AICD Background Paper 1, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Nathan Associates. 2010. Definition and Investment Strategy for a Core Strategic Transport Network for Eastern and Southern Africa: Corridor Review and Performance Report. Draft Document submitted to the World Bank, Washington, DC. Ocean Shipping Consultants, Inc. 2009. “Beyond the Bottlenecks: Ports in Africa.� AICD Background Paper 8, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Teravaninthorn and Raballand. 2009. Transport Prices and Costs in Africa. World Bank: Washington DC. United Nations Joint Logistics Center. http://www.unjlc.org/old-site/sudan/infrastructure/assessments/. Accessed in January 2011. Yoshino Yutaka 2009. Upper Nile State Growth Diagnostics: A Southern Sudan State Case Study. Background paper for Sudan: The Road Toward Sustainable and Broad-based growth. Washington, DC. 3 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Water supply and sanitation African Ministers Council on Water (AMCOW). 2010. Country Status Overviews on Water Supply and Sanitation 2010. Regional Synthesis Report, August 2010. Draft presentation https://www.wsp.org/wsp/sites/wsp.org/files/userfiles/WSP_AMCOW_CSO2.pdf ———. 2010. Southern Sudan: Country Status Overview on Water Supply and Sanitation. Draft report (for circulation to Biannual Review participants), December 2009. Banerjee, Sudeshna, Vivien Foster, Yvonne Ying, Heather Skilling, and Quentin Wodon. 2008a. “Cost Recovery, Equity, and Efficiency in Water Tariffs: Evidence from African Utilities.� AICD Working Paper 7, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Banerjee, Sudeshna, Heather Skilling, Vivien Foster, Cecilia Briceño-Garmendia, Elvira Morella, and Tarik Chfadi. 2008b. “Ebbing Water, Surging Deficits: Urban Water Supply in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 12, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. GoSS (Government of Southern Sudan)/Ministry of Water Resources and Irrigation (MoWRI). 2010. “GoSS Water Strategic Framework.� Advanced draft, Juba, December 2010. ———. “Draft Water Policy.� Juba, September 2007. Gulyani, Sumila, Debabrata Talukdar, and Darby Jack. 2009. “Poverty, Living Conditions, and Infrastructure Access: A Comparison of Slums in Dakar, Johannesburg, and Nairobi.� AICD Working Paper 10, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. IBNET (The international Benchmarking Network for Water and Sanitation Utilities). 2011. www.ib- net.org/. Japanese International Cooperation Agency (JICA). 2009. Juba Urban Water Supply Capacity Development Study in the Southern Sudan. Interim Report I, JICA Keener, Sarah, Manuel Luengo, and Sudeshna Banerjee. 2009. “Provision of Water to the Poor in Africa: Experience with Water Standposts and the Informal Water Sector.� AICD Working Paper 13, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. Morella, Elvira, Vivien Foster, and Sudeshna Ghosh Banerjee. 2008. “Climbing the Ladder: The State of Sanitation in Sub-Saharan Africa.� AICD Background Paper 13, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. WHO (World Health Organization), Joint Monitoring Program (JMP). 2010a. “Sudan Estimates for the Use of Improved Drinking-Water Sources.� www.wssinfo.org/resources/documents.html. ———. 2010. “Sudan Estimates for the use of Improved Sanitation Facilities.� www.wssinfo.org/resources/documents.html. World Bank. 2010a. “Sudan: Issues in Urban Development: Phase 1—Overview of the Urban Landscape.� Urban and Water Unit/Sustainable Development Department, Africa Region, World Bank, Washington, DC. 4 SUDAN’S INFRASTRUCTURE: A CONTINENTAL PERSPECTIVE Other Financial Standards Foundation. 2010. “Country Brief: Sudan.� E-standards Forum, New York. Foster. Vivien, William Butterfield, Chuan Chen and Nataliya Pushak 2009. Building Bridges China’s Growing Role as Infrastructure Financier for Sub-Saharan Africa. Public-Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility, World Bank. Washington DC Louis Berger Group and Doshi Borgan & Partners. 2010. “Sudan National Transport Master Plan: Executive Summary.� Prepared for the Ministry of Finance and National Economy and Ministry of Transport, Roads and Bridges, Sudan. Southern Sudan Center for Census, Statistics and Evaluation. 2010. Statistical Yearbook for Southern Sudan 2010. Juba. World Bank. 2008. “Revitalizing Sudan’s Non-Oil Exports a Diagnostic Trade Integration Study (DTIS).� Prepared for the Integrated Framework Program, World Bank, Washington, DC. ———. 2009a. “Sudan: The Road toward Sustainable and Broad-based Growth.� Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit, Africa Region, Washington, DC. ———. 2009b. “Sudan Investment Climate.� Finance and Private Sector Development Unit, Africa Region, Washington, DC. ———. 2010b. “Sudan Poverty Assessment. Part 1: Poverty Profile of the Northern States.� Draft version, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit, Africa Region, Washington, DC. ———. 2010c. “Sudan Poverty Assessment. Part 1: Poverty Profile of the Southern States.� Draft version, Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit, Africa Region, Washington, DC. Yoshino, Yuataka. 2010. “Presentation of Key Findings from the Trade Facilitation Assessment Field Work: Case of Southern Sudan.� Draft presentation, Juba, Sudan. 5