Sudan war shatters infrastructure, costly rebuild needed
One consequence of the infrastructure breakdown can be seen in a rapid cholera outbreak that has claimed 172 deaths out of 2,729 cases over the past week alone mainly in Khartoum.
Other parts of central and western Sudan, including the Darfur region, are similarly ravaged by fighting, while the extensive damage in Khartoum, once the centre of service provision, reverberates across the country.
Sudanese authorities estimate reconstruction needs at $300bn for Khartoum and $700bn for the rest of Sudan.
The UN is doing its own estimates.
Sudan's oil production has more than halved to 24,000 barrels-per-day and its refining capabilities ceased as the main al-Jaili oil refinery sustained $3bn in damages during battles, oil and energy minister Mohieddine Naeem told Reuters.
Without refining capacity, Sudan now exports all its crude and relies on imports, he said. It also struggles to maintain pipelines needed by South Sudan for its own exports.
Earlier this month, drones targeted fuel depots and the airport at the country's main port city in an attack Sudan blamed on the UAE. The Gulf country denied the accusations.
All of Khartoum's power stations have been destroyed, Naeem said. The national electrical company recently announced a plan to increase supply from Egypt to northern Sudan and said earlier in the year that repeated drone attacks to stations outside Khartoum were stretching its ability to keep the grid going.
LOOTED COPPER
Government forces re-took Khartoum earlier this year and as people return to houses turned upside down by looters, one distinctive feature has been deep holes drilled into walls and roads to uncover valuable copper wire.
On Sudan's Nile Street, once its busiest throughway, there is a ditch about one metre deep and 4km long, stripped of wiring and with traces of burning.
Khartoum's two main water stations went out of commission early in the war as RSF soldiers looted machinery and used fuel oil to power vehicles, according to Khartoum state spokesperson Altayeb Saadeddine.
Those who have remained in Khartoum resort to drinking water from the Nile or long-forgotten wells, exposing them to waterborne illnesses. But there are few hospitals equipped to treat them.
'There has been systematic sabotage by militias against hospitals, and most medical equipment has been looted and what remains has been deliberately destroyed,' said health minister Haitham Mohamed Ibrahim, putting losses to the health system at $11bn.
With two or three million people looking at returning to Khartoum, interventions were needed to avoid further humanitarian emergencies like the cholera outbreak, said UN Development Programme resident representative Luca Renda.
But continued war and limited budget means a full-scale reconstruction plan is not in the works.
'What we can do ... with the capacity we have on the ground, is to look at smaller-scale infrastructure rehabilitation,' he said, like solar-power water pumps, hospitals, and schools.
In that way, he said, the war may provide an opportunity for decentralising services away from Khartoum, and pursuing greener energy sources.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


eNCA
3 hours ago
- eNCA
Key climate target of airline decarbonisation 'in peril': IATA
WASHINGTON - The airline industry's flagship goal of decarbonising by 2050 is now "in peril" due to climate-sceptic policies, including those of US President Donald Trump, the leading airline association IATA warned on Sunday. The emergence of leaders favouring fossil fuels and recent regulatory rollbacks are "obviously a setback... it does imperil success on the 2050 horizon", Marie Owens Thomsen, the International Air Transport Association's senior vice president for sustainability, told reporters. "But I don't think it's going to halt or reverse progress. I think it will just slow progress," she said at the IATA annual industry conference in India. Trump's Republican administration is supporting the development of fossil fuels in contrast to his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, who had massively supported the production of renewable aviation fuels through tax credits. UN aviation agency members, from the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), have set the year 2050 as their goal for achieving net-zero carbon emissions for air travel -- an industry often criticised for its outsized role in climate change. The air transportation industry has faced growing pressure to deal with its contribution to the climate crisis. Currently responsible for 2.5 percent to three percent of global CO2 emissions, the sector's switch to renewable fuels is proving difficult, even if the aeronautics industry and energy companies have been seeking progress. To achieve net-zero emissions, airlines rely on non-fossil sources known as Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF). However, SAF biofuels are still three to four times more expensive than petroleum-based jet fuel. SAF is seen as a crucial ingredient in hitting emissions targets. The biofuel produces lower carbon emissions than traditional jet fuel and is made from plant and animal materials such as cooking oil and fat. European Union rules require carriers to include two percent of SAF in their fuel mix starting this year, rising to six percent in 2030 before soaring to 70 percent from 2050. IATA also indicated on Sunday that it expects global SAF production to double this year compared with 2024 to 2.5 billion litres -- slightly down from its previous projections of 2.7 billion litres.

TimesLIVE
3 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
Gaza ministry says Israel killed more than 30 aid seekers, Israel denies
More than 30 Palestinians were killed and nearly 170 injured on Sunday near a food distribution site in south Gaza, the health ministry said, as witnesses reported Israeli soldiers fired on people trying to collect aid and Israel denied it. The US-based Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF) said food was distributed without incident on Sunday at the distribution point in Rafah and there were no deaths or injuries. GHF released an undated video to support its statement that showed dozens of people gathering around piles of boxes. Reuters could not independently verify the video or what took place. Witnesses said the Israeli military opened fire as thousands of Palestinians gathered to receive food aid. Israel's military said an initial inquiry found soldiers had not fired on civilians while they were near or within the distribution site. The Hamas-controlled Gaza health ministry said 31 people were killed with a single gunshot wound to the head or chest from Israeli fire as they were gathered in the Al-Alam district aid distribution area in Rafah. It said 169 were injured.

TimesLIVE
4 hours ago
- TimesLIVE
Man attacks Colorado crowd with firebombs, 6 people injured
Six people were injured on Sunday when a 45-year-old man yelled 'free Palestine' and threw incendiary devices into a crowd in Boulder, Colorado, where a demonstration to remember the Israeli hostages who remain in Gaza was taking place, authorities said. Six victims aged between 67 and 88 were transported to hospitals, said the FBI special agent in charge of the Denver field office, Mark Michalek. At least one of them was in a critical condition, authorities said. 'As a result of the preliminary facts, it is clear this is a targeted act of violence and the FBI is investigating it as an act of terrorism,' Michalek said. He named the suspect as Mohamed Soliman, who was hospitalised shortly after the attack. Reuters could not immediately locate contact information for him or his family. FBI director Kash Patel also described the incident as a 'targeted terror attack,' and Colorado attorney general Phil Weiser said it appeared to be 'a hate crime given the group that was targeted'. Boulder police chief Stephen Redfearn said he did not believe anyone else was involved. 'We're fairly confident we have the lone suspect in custody,' he said. The attack took place at the Pearl Street Mall, a popular pedestrian shopping district in the shadow of the University of Colorado, during an event organised by Run for Their Lives, an organisation devoted to drawing attention to the hostages seized in the aftermath of Hamas' 2023 attack on Israel.