Madagascar declares 15-day state of energy emergency
Change
Madagascar declared a 15-day nationwide state of energy emergency that empowers authorities to take exceptional measures to restore fuel and electricity supply and ensure continuity of public services.
Why it matters
The declaration enables central authorities to impose emergency allocation, rationing or prioritisation of fuel and power, which will limit routine commercial access to energy. Procurement and operations teams that rely on regular fuel deliveries will face constrained supply and must operate under centrally directed priorities for public services.
Implications
- — Fuel distributors and wholesale importers must apply for and secure any emergency allocation or priority approvals from authorities to continue normal deliveries — failure to obtain approvals will expose their customers to enforced rationing or suspended supplies.
- — Public electricity providers' operations teams must implement emergency prioritisation and conservation protocols to maintain service to critical infrastructure — failure to do so may result in centrally mandated load-shedding or reallocation of power.
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