Terrorism, insurgency, kidnapping, and security in Africa's energy sector
Terrorism, insurgency, kidnapping, and security in Africa's energy sector
Energy continues to serve as the bedrock of modern economies and the main driver of modern society. For Africa, the production and supply of energy resources such as crude oil, natural gas, uranium, coal, biomass, biofuels and other renewables are an important source of employment, rents, taxes, royalties and profits. This sector brings in several tens of billions of dollars of revenue annually. The production and delivery of such resources, however, depend on critical infrastructures such as pipelines, refineries, processing plants, terminals, rigs, electrical energy pylons, substations, pump stations, vessels, and tankers. These infrastructures have been attacked by terrorists, insurgents, vandals and saboteurs, all of whom see them as targets against which to register their grievances and extract concessions from the state. This paper is a chronological account of some of the documented incidents of terrorism, insurgency, kidnapping, destruction, sabotage, and human casualties suffered in the oil and gas sectors in Africa between 1999 and 2012. It is based on data extracted from the databases of the RAND Database of World Terrorism Incidents and the University of Maryland's Global Terrorism Database (GTD).
CITATION: Adusei, Lord Aikins. Terrorism, insurgency, kidnapping, and security in Africa's energy sector . : Taylor & Francis , 2015. African Security Review, Vol. 24, Issue 3, September 2015, pp. 332-359 - Available at: https://library.au.int/terrorism-insurgency-kidnapping-and-security-africas-energy-sector-1