Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective

Liberia's 14-year civil war left much of the country's infrastructure shambles. The country's 170 megawatt power generation capacity and national grid were completely destroyed. In Monrovia, just 0.1 percent of households had access...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Foster, Vivien, Pushak, Nataliya
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
AIR
GAS
WEB
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/765241468010485183/Liberias-infrastructure-a-continental-perspective
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27770
id okr-10986-27770
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
ACCESSIBILITY
ADSL
AIR
AIR SAFETY
AIR TRAFFIC
AIR TRANSPORT
AIRCRAFT
AIRWAYS
APPROACH
ARTERY
AVAILABILITY
AVAILABILITY OF DATA
BACK-UP
BACKBONE
BACKBONES
BALANCE
BANDWIDTH
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIOMASS
BIOMASS GENERATION
BOTTLENECKS
BRIDGE
BROADBAND
BUDGET EXECUTION
CABLE
CAPITAL COSTS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
CARGO
CARGO HANDLING
CARGO HANDLING CHARGE
CARGO HANDLING OPERATIONS
COMMODITY
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES
CONCESSION
CONCESSION ARRANGEMENTS
CONCESSIONAIRES
CONCESSIONS
CONNECTIVITY
COPYRIGHT
COST RECOVERY
COSTS OF POWER
CUSTOMER TARIFF
CUSTOMS
DEFICITS
DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY
DEMAND FOR POWER
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION ASSETS
DISTRIBUTION LOSSES
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
E-MAIL
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRIFICATION
EMPLOYMENT
END-USER
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
FINANCIAL BURDEN
FINANCIAL FLOWS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FUEL
FUEL OIL
GAS
GENERATION
GENERATION CAPACITY
GENERATION OF ELECTRICITY
GENERATORS
GLOBAL STANDARDS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATES
HEAVY FUEL OIL
HOUSEHOLD ACCESS
HOUSEHOLD BUDGETS
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HYDROPOWER
INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLATION
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS
INVESTMENT TARGETS
ISPS
KILOWATT-HOUR
KILOWATT-HOURS
LANDLORD PORTS
LEVIES
LICENSES
MAINTENANCE EXPENDITURES
MARKET CONCENTRATION
MARKET SHARE
MATERIAL
MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT
MOBILE PHONE
MOBILE TELEPHONE
MULTINATIONAL COMPANIES
MUNICIPALITIES
NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
NATIONAL TRANSPORT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NETWORK TRAFFIC
O&M
OPEN ACCESS
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCIES
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY
PENETRATION RATES
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
POPULATION DENSITY
PORT ACCESS
PORT AUTHORITY
PORT CHARGES
PORTS
POST-CONFLICT
POWER
POWER CONSUMPTION
POWER COSTS
POWER DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER GENERATION CAPACITY
POWER GRID
POWER SECTOR
POWER SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
POWER TRADE
PRICE OF POWER
PRICE OF WATER
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC NETWORKS
PUBLIC PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR INFORMATION
PUBLIC WORKS
QUERIES
RADIO
RAIL
RAIL SERVICE
RAILWAY
RAILWAY LINE
RAILWAYS
REGIONAL NETWORK
REGIONAL NETWORKS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
RESULT
RESULTS
REVENUE COLLECTION
ROAD
ROAD MAINTENANCE
ROAD NETWORK
ROAD SECTOR
ROAD TRAFFIC
ROAD USER
ROAD USER CHARGES
ROAD USER CHARGING
ROADS
ROUTE
ROUTES
RURAL ACCESS
RURAL ROADS
SANITATION
SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION SECTOR
SANITATION UTILITIES
SAVINGS
SEAT CAPACITY
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SITES
SURFACE ACCESS
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS
TELECOM
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
TELEPHONE
TELEPHONE NETWORK
TELEPHONE PENETRATION
TRAFFIC
TRAFFIC FLOW
TRAFFIC FLOWS
TRAFFIC GROWTH
TRAFFIC LEVELS
TRAFFIC VOLUMES
TRANSMISSION
TRANSMISSION GRID
TRANSMISSION LINE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INDICATORS
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS
TRANSPORT MARKET
TRANSPORT NETWORK
TRANSPORT POLICY
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORT STRATEGY
TRUCK PROCESSING
TRUE
TURNAROUND TIME
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
URBAN GROWTH
URBAN ROAD
URBAN ROADS
URBAN TRANSPORT
USERS
UTILITIES
UTILITY BILL
UTILITY BILLS
VEHICLES
VSAT
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER SERVICE
WATER SERVICES
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WEB
WEB SITE
WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY
spellingShingle ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
ACCESSIBILITY
ADSL
AIR
AIR SAFETY
AIR TRAFFIC
AIR TRANSPORT
AIRCRAFT
AIRWAYS
APPROACH
ARTERY
AVAILABILITY
AVAILABILITY OF DATA
BACK-UP
BACKBONE
BACKBONES
BALANCE
BANDWIDTH
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIOMASS
BIOMASS GENERATION
BOTTLENECKS
BRIDGE
BROADBAND
BUDGET EXECUTION
CABLE
CAPITAL COSTS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
CARGO
CARGO HANDLING
CARGO HANDLING CHARGE
CARGO HANDLING OPERATIONS
COMMODITY
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES
CONCESSION
CONCESSION ARRANGEMENTS
CONCESSIONAIRES
CONCESSIONS
CONNECTIVITY
COPYRIGHT
COST RECOVERY
COSTS OF POWER
CUSTOMER TARIFF
CUSTOMS
DEFICITS
DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY
DEMAND FOR POWER
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION ASSETS
DISTRIBUTION LOSSES
DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
E-MAIL
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ELECTRIFICATION
EMPLOYMENT
END-USER
ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
FINANCIAL BURDEN
FINANCIAL FLOWS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FUEL
FUEL OIL
GAS
GENERATION
GENERATION CAPACITY
GENERATION OF ELECTRICITY
GENERATORS
GLOBAL STANDARDS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH RATES
HEAVY FUEL OIL
HOUSEHOLD ACCESS
HOUSEHOLD BUDGETS
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HYDROPOWER
INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING
INNOVATIONS
INSTALLATION
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS
INVESTMENT TARGETS
ISPS
KILOWATT-HOUR
KILOWATT-HOURS
LANDLORD PORTS
LEVIES
LICENSES
MAINTENANCE EXPENDITURES
MARKET CONCENTRATION
MARKET SHARE
MATERIAL
MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT
MOBILE PHONE
MOBILE TELEPHONE
MULTINATIONAL COMPANIES
MUNICIPALITIES
NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
NATIONAL TRANSPORT
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCES
NETWORK TRAFFIC
O&M
OPEN ACCESS
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCIES
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY
PENETRATION RATES
PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
POPULATION DENSITY
PORT ACCESS
PORT AUTHORITY
PORT CHARGES
PORTS
POST-CONFLICT
POWER
POWER CONSUMPTION
POWER COSTS
POWER DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER GENERATION CAPACITY
POWER GRID
POWER SECTOR
POWER SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
POWER TRADE
PRICE OF POWER
PRICE OF WATER
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC NETWORKS
PUBLIC PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR INFORMATION
PUBLIC WORKS
QUERIES
RADIO
RAIL
RAIL SERVICE
RAILWAY
RAILWAY LINE
RAILWAYS
REGIONAL NETWORK
REGIONAL NETWORKS
REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT
RESULT
RESULTS
REVENUE COLLECTION
ROAD
ROAD MAINTENANCE
ROAD NETWORK
ROAD SECTOR
ROAD TRAFFIC
ROAD USER
ROAD USER CHARGES
ROAD USER CHARGING
ROADS
ROUTE
ROUTES
RURAL ACCESS
RURAL ROADS
SANITATION
SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION SECTOR
SANITATION UTILITIES
SAVINGS
SEAT CAPACITY
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SITES
SURFACE ACCESS
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS
TELECOM
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM
TELEPHONE
TELEPHONE NETWORK
TELEPHONE PENETRATION
TRAFFIC
TRAFFIC FLOW
TRAFFIC FLOWS
TRAFFIC GROWTH
TRAFFIC LEVELS
TRAFFIC VOLUMES
TRANSMISSION
TRANSMISSION GRID
TRANSMISSION LINE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT INDICATORS
TRANSPORT INDUSTRY
TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE
TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS
TRANSPORT MARKET
TRANSPORT NETWORK
TRANSPORT POLICY
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORT STRATEGY
TRUCK PROCESSING
TRUE
TURNAROUND TIME
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
URBAN GROWTH
URBAN ROAD
URBAN ROADS
URBAN TRANSPORT
USERS
UTILITIES
UTILITY BILL
UTILITY BILLS
VEHICLES
VSAT
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER SERVICE
WATER SERVICES
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WEB
WEB SITE
WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY
Foster, Vivien
Pushak, Nataliya
Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
geographic_facet Africa
Liberia
description Liberia's 14-year civil war left much of the country's infrastructure shambles. The country's 170 megawatt power generation capacity and national grid were completely destroyed. In Monrovia, just 0.1 percent of households had access to electricity. According to the 2008 National Census, access to piped water fell from 15 percent of the population in 1986 to less than 3 percent in 2008. The national road network was left in severe disrepair. Peace brought many positive developments. The Freeport of Monrovia is now privately managed and has resumed normal operations. Essential rehabilitation work has been carried out, and the port's performance now matches that of neighboring ports along the West African coast. Liberia has also successfully liberalized its mobile telephone markets, with access surging to 40 percent in 2009, at some of the lowest prices in Africa. Despite the potential for private investment, Liberia will likely need more than a decade to reach the illustrative infrastructure targets outlined in this report. Under business-as-usual assumptions for spending and efficiency, it would take at least 40 years for Liberia to reach these goals. Yet with a combination of increased finance, improved efficiency, and cost-reducing innovations, it should be possible to significantly reduce that time.
format Report
author Foster, Vivien
Pushak, Nataliya
author_facet Foster, Vivien
Pushak, Nataliya
author_sort Foster, Vivien
title Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_short Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_full Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_fullStr Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_sort liberia's infrastructure : a continental perspective
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/765241468010485183/Liberias-infrastructure-a-continental-perspective
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27770
_version_ 1764464535592239104
spelling okr-10986-277702021-04-23T14:04:42Z Liberia's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective Foster, Vivien Pushak, Nataliya ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY ACCESS TO SERVICES ACCESSIBILITY ADSL AIR AIR SAFETY AIR TRAFFIC AIR TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT AIRWAYS APPROACH ARTERY AVAILABILITY AVAILABILITY OF DATA BACK-UP BACKBONE BACKBONES BALANCE BANDWIDTH BARRIERS TO ENTRY BEST PRACTICE BIOMASS BIOMASS GENERATION BOTTLENECKS BRIDGE BROADBAND BUDGET EXECUTION CABLE CAPITAL COSTS CAPITAL EXPENDITURE CARGO CARGO HANDLING CARGO HANDLING CHARGE CARGO HANDLING OPERATIONS COMMODITY COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES CONCESSION CONCESSION ARRANGEMENTS CONCESSIONAIRES CONCESSIONS CONNECTIVITY COPYRIGHT COST RECOVERY COSTS OF POWER CUSTOMER TARIFF CUSTOMS DEFICITS DEMAND FOR ELECTRICITY DEMAND FOR POWER DIESEL DISTRIBUTION ASSETS DISTRIBUTION LOSSES DISTRIBUTION NETWORK E-MAIL ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIES OF SCALE ELECTRIFICATION EMPLOYMENT END-USER ENERGY INFRASTRUCTURE ENTERPRISE SURVEYS FINANCIAL BURDEN FINANCIAL FLOWS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTMENT FUEL FUEL OIL GAS GENERATION GENERATION CAPACITY GENERATION OF ELECTRICITY GENERATORS GLOBAL STANDARDS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH RATES HEAVY FUEL OIL HOUSEHOLD ACCESS HOUSEHOLD BUDGETS HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION HYDROPOWER INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTS INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING INNOVATIONS INSTALLATION INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS INVESTMENT TARGETS ISPS KILOWATT-HOUR KILOWATT-HOURS LANDLORD PORTS LEVIES LICENSES MAINTENANCE EXPENDITURES MARKET CONCENTRATION MARKET SHARE MATERIAL MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT MOBILE PHONE MOBILE TELEPHONE MULTINATIONAL COMPANIES MUNICIPALITIES NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE NATIONAL TRANSPORT NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCES NETWORK TRAFFIC O&M OPEN ACCESS OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCIES OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY PENETRATION RATES PERFORMANCE INDICATORS PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE POPULATION DENSITY PORT ACCESS PORT AUTHORITY PORT CHARGES PORTS POST-CONFLICT POWER POWER CONSUMPTION POWER COSTS POWER DEMAND POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION CAPACITY POWER GRID POWER SECTOR POWER SECTOR DEVELOPMENT POWER TRADE PRICE OF POWER PRICE OF WATER PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE SECTOR PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC NETWORKS PUBLIC PRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR INFORMATION PUBLIC WORKS QUERIES RADIO RAIL RAIL SERVICE RAILWAY RAILWAY LINE RAILWAYS REGIONAL NETWORK REGIONAL NETWORKS REGULATORY ENVIRONMENT RESULT RESULTS REVENUE COLLECTION ROAD ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD NETWORK ROAD SECTOR ROAD TRAFFIC ROAD USER ROAD USER CHARGES ROAD USER CHARGING ROADS ROUTE ROUTES RURAL ACCESS RURAL ROADS SANITATION SANITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION SECTOR SANITATION UTILITIES SAVINGS SEAT CAPACITY SERVICE PROVIDERS SITES SURFACE ACCESS TECHNICAL SUPPORT TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS TELECOM TELECOMMUNICATIONS TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM TELEPHONE TELEPHONE NETWORK TELEPHONE PENETRATION TRAFFIC TRAFFIC FLOW TRAFFIC FLOWS TRAFFIC GROWTH TRAFFIC LEVELS TRAFFIC VOLUMES TRANSMISSION TRANSMISSION GRID TRANSMISSION LINE TRANSPORT TRANSPORT INDICATORS TRANSPORT INDUSTRY TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE TRANSPORT INVESTMENTS TRANSPORT MARKET TRANSPORT NETWORK TRANSPORT POLICY TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORT STRATEGY TRUCK PROCESSING TRUE TURNAROUND TIME UNIVERSAL ACCESS URBAN GROWTH URBAN ROAD URBAN ROADS URBAN TRANSPORT USERS UTILITIES UTILITY BILL UTILITY BILLS VEHICLES VSAT WATER CONSUMPTION WATER SERVICE WATER SERVICES WATER TARIFFS WATER UTILITIES WEB WEB SITE WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY Liberia's 14-year civil war left much of the country's infrastructure shambles. The country's 170 megawatt power generation capacity and national grid were completely destroyed. In Monrovia, just 0.1 percent of households had access to electricity. According to the 2008 National Census, access to piped water fell from 15 percent of the population in 1986 to less than 3 percent in 2008. The national road network was left in severe disrepair. Peace brought many positive developments. The Freeport of Monrovia is now privately managed and has resumed normal operations. Essential rehabilitation work has been carried out, and the port's performance now matches that of neighboring ports along the West African coast. Liberia has also successfully liberalized its mobile telephone markets, with access surging to 40 percent in 2009, at some of the lowest prices in Africa. Despite the potential for private investment, Liberia will likely need more than a decade to reach the illustrative infrastructure targets outlined in this report. Under business-as-usual assumptions for spending and efficiency, it would take at least 40 years for Liberia to reach these goals. Yet with a combination of increased finance, improved efficiency, and cost-reducing innovations, it should be possible to significantly reduce that time. 2017-08-14T19:56:04Z 2017-08-14T19:56:04Z 2010-03 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/765241468010485183/Liberias-infrastructure-a-continental-perspective http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27770 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Recent Economic Developments in Infrastructure Economic & Sector Work Africa Liberia