Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective

Despite external shocks, Mali's economy grew by 5.3 percent per year between 2003 and 2006, driven primarily by the telecommunications sector. But Mali's landlocked condition, together with the uneven distribution of population and econom...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M., Dominguez, Carolina, Pushak, Nataliya
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
AIR
CAR
GAS
ICT
O&M
OIL
WEB
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20110617131046
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3452
id okr-10986-3452
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
topic ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACCESS TO ENERGY
ACCESS TO ENERGY SERVICES
ACCESSIBILITY
ADEQUATE WATER SUPPLY
ADSL
AFFORDABLE ACCESS
AIR
AIR MARKET
AIR SAFETY
AIR TRANSPORT
AIRCRAFT
AIRPORT
AIRPORT SECURITY
AIRPORTS
ALTERNATIVE ROUTES
APPROACH
AVAILABILITY
AVERAGE TARIFF
BALANCE
BANDWIDTH
BEST PRACTICE
BITS PER SECOND
BOOKMARK
BRIDGE
BROADBAND
BROADBAND MARKET
BUSINESSES
CABLE
CALL PRICES
CAPITAL COSTS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
CAR
CAR BATTERIES
CARRIERS
CASH FLOW
CHEAPER POWER
COAL
COLLECTION EFFICIENCY
COMMERCIAL TARIFFS
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVENESS
CONCESSION
CONCESSION CONTRACT
CONCESSIONS
CONNECTION SPEEDS
CONNECTIVITY
COST OF POWER
COST RECOVERY
COST RECOVERY RATIO
COSTS OF POWER
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS CLEARANCE
DEMAND FOR POWER
DERAILMENTS
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION LOSSES
DOMESTIC ENERGY
DRY CELLS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ELECTRIC UTILITY
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SECTOR
ELECTRICITY SERVICES
END-USER
ENERGY COSTS
ENERGY SERVICES
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
EQUIPMENT
FARES
FINANCIAL BURDEN
FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
FINANCIAL SCHEMES
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
FLEETS
FREIGHT
FREIGHT TRAFFIC
FUEL
GAS
GENERATION
GENERATION CAPACITY
GENERATION COSTS
GROWTH RATES
GUARANTEE PROGRAM
HARMONIZATION
HIGHWAYS
HYDROCARBONS
HYDROELECTRIC PLANT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
HYDROPOWER
ICT
INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING
INNOVATIONS
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INVESTMENT TARGETS
ISPS
KEROSENE
KILOWATT-HOUR
LICENSE
LICENSES
LOCOMOTIVE
MAINTENANCE CONTRACTS
MAINTENANCE COSTS
MARGINAL COSTS
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONCENTRATION
MARKET SHARE
MINERAL RESOURCES
MOBILE PHONE
MOBILE SERVICES
MOBILE TELEPHONE
MODE OF TRANSPORT
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEIGHBORHOODS
O&M
OIL
OIL IMPORTS
OIL PRICES
OIL PRODUCER
OPEN ACCESS
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY
PASSENGER TRAFFIC
PASSENGERS
PENETRATION RATE
PHONES
POPULATION DENSITY
POPULATION GROWTH
POWER
POWER CONSUMPTION
POWER COSTS
POWER DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER GENERATION CAPACITY
POWER GRID
POWER PRICES
POWER SECTOR
POWER SECTORS
POWER TRADE
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE OPERATORS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR INVOLVEMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
QUALITY OF SERVICE
RAIL
RAIL COMPANY
RAIL NETWORK
RAIL NETWORKS
RAIL OPERATOR
RAIL SYSTEM
RAILWAY
RAILWAY LINE
RAILWAYS
REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
REGIONAL NETWORKS
REGIONAL TRANSPORT
RELIABILITY
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS
RESULT
RESULTS
REVENUE COLLECTION
ROAD
ROAD MAINTENANCE
ROAD NETWORK
ROAD NETWORKS
ROAD SECTOR
ROAD TRAFFIC
ROAD TRANSPORT
ROADS
ROLLING STOCK
ROUTE
RURAL ACCESS
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SAFETY
SANITATION
SANITATION SECTOR
SANITATION SERVICES
SANITATION UTILITIES
SECURE ACCESS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SITES
SPEEDS
SUPPLY COSTS
TARIFF REVISIONS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOM
TELECOMMUNICATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TRAFFIC
TRAFFIC DENSITY
TRAFFIC LEVELS
TRAFFIC PATTERNS
TRAFFIC VOLUME
TRANSIT
TRANSMISSION
TRANSMISSION CAPACITY
TRANSMISSION LINE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TRANSPORT COSTS
TRANSPORT INDICATORS
TRANSPORT MARKET
TRANSPORT QUALITY
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORTATION
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
USER
USERS
USES
VEHICLES
VOICE TELEPHONY
VOLTAGE
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER RESOURCES
WATER SERVICES
WATER SUPPLY INFRASTRUCTURE
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WEALTH
WEB
spellingShingle ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY
ACCESS TO ENERGY
ACCESS TO ENERGY SERVICES
ACCESSIBILITY
ADEQUATE WATER SUPPLY
ADSL
AFFORDABLE ACCESS
AIR
AIR MARKET
AIR SAFETY
AIR TRANSPORT
AIRCRAFT
AIRPORT
AIRPORT SECURITY
AIRPORTS
ALTERNATIVE ROUTES
APPROACH
AVAILABILITY
AVERAGE TARIFF
BALANCE
BANDWIDTH
BEST PRACTICE
BITS PER SECOND
BOOKMARK
BRIDGE
BROADBAND
BROADBAND MARKET
BUSINESSES
CABLE
CALL PRICES
CAPITAL COSTS
CAPITAL EXPENDITURE
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
CAR
CAR BATTERIES
CARRIERS
CASH FLOW
CHEAPER POWER
COAL
COLLECTION EFFICIENCY
COMMERCIAL TARIFFS
COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
COMPETITIVENESS
CONCESSION
CONCESSION CONTRACT
CONCESSIONS
CONNECTION SPEEDS
CONNECTIVITY
COST OF POWER
COST RECOVERY
COST RECOVERY RATIO
COSTS OF POWER
CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
CUSTOMS
CUSTOMS CLEARANCE
DEMAND FOR POWER
DERAILMENTS
DIESEL
DISTRIBUTION LOSSES
DOMESTIC ENERGY
DRY CELLS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ELECTRIC UTILITY
ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION
ELECTRICITY SECTOR
ELECTRICITY SERVICES
END-USER
ENERGY COSTS
ENERGY SERVICES
ENTERPRISE SURVEY
ENTERPRISE SURVEYS
EQUIPMENT
FARES
FINANCIAL BURDEN
FINANCIAL FLOWS
FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
FINANCIAL SCHEMES
FINANCIAL VIABILITY
FLEETS
FREIGHT
FREIGHT TRAFFIC
FUEL
GAS
GENERATION
GENERATION CAPACITY
GENERATION COSTS
GROWTH RATES
GUARANTEE PROGRAM
HARMONIZATION
HIGHWAYS
HYDROCARBONS
HYDROELECTRIC PLANT
HYDROELECTRIC POWER
HYDROPOWER
ICT
INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING
INNOVATIONS
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL
INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS
INVESTMENT TARGETS
ISPS
KEROSENE
KILOWATT-HOUR
LICENSE
LICENSES
LOCOMOTIVE
MAINTENANCE CONTRACTS
MAINTENANCE COSTS
MARGINAL COSTS
MARKET ACCESS
MARKET CONCENTRATION
MARKET SHARE
MINERAL RESOURCES
MOBILE PHONE
MOBILE SERVICES
MOBILE TELEPHONE
MODE OF TRANSPORT
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEIGHBORHOODS
O&M
OIL
OIL IMPORTS
OIL PRICES
OIL PRODUCER
OPEN ACCESS
OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY
PASSENGER TRAFFIC
PASSENGERS
PENETRATION RATE
PHONES
POPULATION DENSITY
POPULATION GROWTH
POWER
POWER CONSUMPTION
POWER COSTS
POWER DEMAND
POWER GENERATION
POWER GENERATION CAPACITY
POWER GRID
POWER PRICES
POWER SECTOR
POWER SECTORS
POWER TRADE
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
PRIVATE OPERATORS
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTOR INVOLVEMENT
PRODUCTIVITY
PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
PUBLIC SECTOR
QUALITY OF SERVICE
RAIL
RAIL COMPANY
RAIL NETWORK
RAIL NETWORKS
RAIL OPERATOR
RAIL SYSTEM
RAILWAY
RAILWAY LINE
RAILWAYS
REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
REGIONAL NETWORKS
REGIONAL TRANSPORT
RELIABILITY
RENEWABLE RESOURCES
RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS
RESULT
RESULTS
REVENUE COLLECTION
ROAD
ROAD MAINTENANCE
ROAD NETWORK
ROAD NETWORKS
ROAD SECTOR
ROAD TRAFFIC
ROAD TRANSPORT
ROADS
ROLLING STOCK
ROUTE
RURAL ACCESS
RURAL ELECTRIFICATION
SAFETY
SANITATION
SANITATION SECTOR
SANITATION SERVICES
SANITATION UTILITIES
SECURE ACCESS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
SITES
SPEEDS
SUPPLY COSTS
TARIFF REVISIONS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TELECOM
TELECOMMUNICATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES
TRAFFIC
TRAFFIC DENSITY
TRAFFIC LEVELS
TRAFFIC PATTERNS
TRAFFIC VOLUME
TRANSIT
TRANSMISSION
TRANSMISSION CAPACITY
TRANSMISSION LINE
TRANSPORT
TRANSPORT CORRIDORS
TRANSPORT COSTS
TRANSPORT INDICATORS
TRANSPORT MARKET
TRANSPORT QUALITY
TRANSPORT SECTOR
TRANSPORTATION
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
UNIVERSAL SERVICE
USER
USERS
USES
VEHICLES
VOICE TELEPHONY
VOLTAGE
WATER CONSUMPTION
WATER RESOURCES
WATER SERVICES
WATER SUPPLY INFRASTRUCTURE
WATER TARIFFS
WATER UTILITIES
WEALTH
WEB
Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M.
Dominguez, Carolina
Pushak, Nataliya
Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
geographic_facet Africa
West Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
Sahel
Mali
relation Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 5688
description Despite external shocks, Mali's economy grew by 5.3 percent per year between 2003 and 2006, driven primarily by the telecommunications sector. But Mali's landlocked condition, together with the uneven distribution of population and economic activities between the arid north and the much richer south, defy the country's ability to sustain this pace of growth. Mali depends heavily on regional infrastructure and transport corridors. A strategic focus on regional integration has paid off, and critical institutional decisions are bringing many positive developments. But Mali still faces infrastructure challenges, the starkest of which lies in the power sector. The cost of producing power in Mali is among the highest in the region, with the result that only around 17 percent of the population has access to electricity, much lower than in other low-income African countries. The water and sanitation sectors also represent a challenge, as the nation works to separate the power and water-and-sanitation functions of EDM, the multisector utility. Mali spent about $555 million per year on infrastructure during the late 2000s. A total of $200 million is lost annually to inefficiencies. Assessing spending needs against existing spending and potential efficiency gains leaves an annual funding gap of $283 million per year.Mali 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 over 50 years for Mali to reach these goals. Yet with a combination of increased finance, improved efficiency, and cost-reducing innovations, it should be possible to reduce that time to 15 years.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M.
Dominguez, Carolina
Pushak, Nataliya
author_facet Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M.
Dominguez, Carolina
Pushak, Nataliya
author_sort Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M.
title Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_short Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_full Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_fullStr Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective
title_sort mali's infrastructure : a continental perspective
publishDate 2012
url http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20110617131046
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3452
_version_ 1764387021638336512
spelling okr-10986-34522021-04-23T14:02:09Z Mali's Infrastructure : A Continental Perspective Briceno-Garmendia, Cecilia M. Dominguez, Carolina Pushak, Nataliya ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY ACCESS TO ENERGY ACCESS TO ENERGY SERVICES ACCESSIBILITY ADEQUATE WATER SUPPLY ADSL AFFORDABLE ACCESS AIR AIR MARKET AIR SAFETY AIR TRANSPORT AIRCRAFT AIRPORT AIRPORT SECURITY AIRPORTS ALTERNATIVE ROUTES APPROACH AVAILABILITY AVERAGE TARIFF BALANCE BANDWIDTH BEST PRACTICE BITS PER SECOND BOOKMARK BRIDGE BROADBAND BROADBAND MARKET BUSINESSES CABLE CALL PRICES CAPITAL COSTS CAPITAL EXPENDITURE CAPITAL INVESTMENT CAPITAL INVESTMENTS CAR CAR BATTERIES CARRIERS CASH FLOW CHEAPER POWER COAL COLLECTION EFFICIENCY COMMERCIAL TARIFFS COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGIES COMPETITIVE MARKETS COMPETITIVENESS CONCESSION CONCESSION CONTRACT CONCESSIONS CONNECTION SPEEDS CONNECTIVITY COST OF POWER COST RECOVERY COST RECOVERY RATIO COSTS OF POWER CUSTOMER SATISFACTION CUSTOMS CUSTOMS CLEARANCE DEMAND FOR POWER DERAILMENTS DIESEL DISTRIBUTION LOSSES DOMESTIC ENERGY DRY CELLS ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC GROWTH ELECTRIC UTILITY ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION ELECTRICITY SECTOR ELECTRICITY SERVICES END-USER ENERGY COSTS ENERGY SERVICES ENTERPRISE SURVEY ENTERPRISE SURVEYS EQUIPMENT FARES FINANCIAL BURDEN FINANCIAL FLOWS FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE FINANCIAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL SCHEMES FINANCIAL VIABILITY FLEETS FREIGHT FREIGHT TRAFFIC FUEL GAS GENERATION GENERATION CAPACITY GENERATION COSTS GROWTH RATES GUARANTEE PROGRAM HARMONIZATION HIGHWAYS HYDROCARBONS HYDROELECTRIC PLANT HYDROELECTRIC POWER HYDROPOWER ICT INFRASTRUCTURE ASSETS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE REHABILITATION INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES INFRASTRUCTURE SPENDING INNOVATIONS INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INTERNATIONAL TRADE INTERNATIONAL TRAVEL INTERNET SERVICE PROVIDERS INVESTMENT TARGETS ISPS KEROSENE KILOWATT-HOUR LICENSE LICENSES LOCOMOTIVE MAINTENANCE CONTRACTS MAINTENANCE COSTS MARGINAL COSTS MARKET ACCESS MARKET CONCENTRATION MARKET SHARE MINERAL RESOURCES MOBILE PHONE MOBILE SERVICES MOBILE TELEPHONE MODE OF TRANSPORT NATURAL RESOURCES NEIGHBORHOODS O&M OIL OIL IMPORTS OIL PRICES OIL PRODUCER OPEN ACCESS OPERATIONAL EFFICIENCY PASSENGER TRAFFIC PASSENGERS PENETRATION RATE PHONES POPULATION DENSITY POPULATION GROWTH POWER POWER CONSUMPTION POWER COSTS POWER DEMAND POWER GENERATION POWER GENERATION CAPACITY POWER GRID POWER PRICES POWER SECTOR POWER SECTORS POWER TRADE PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRIVATE OPERATORS PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTOR INVOLVEMENT PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR QUALITY OF SERVICE RAIL RAIL COMPANY RAIL NETWORK RAIL NETWORKS RAIL OPERATOR RAIL SYSTEM RAILWAY RAILWAY LINE RAILWAYS REGIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE REGIONAL NETWORKS REGIONAL TRANSPORT RELIABILITY RENEWABLE RESOURCES RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS RESULT RESULTS REVENUE COLLECTION ROAD ROAD MAINTENANCE ROAD NETWORK ROAD NETWORKS ROAD SECTOR ROAD TRAFFIC ROAD TRANSPORT ROADS ROLLING STOCK ROUTE RURAL ACCESS RURAL ELECTRIFICATION SAFETY SANITATION SANITATION SECTOR SANITATION SERVICES SANITATION UTILITIES SECURE ACCESS SERVICE PROVIDERS SITES SPEEDS SUPPLY COSTS TARIFF REVISIONS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TELECOM TELECOMMUNICATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TELECOMMUNICATIONS SERVICES TRAFFIC TRAFFIC DENSITY TRAFFIC LEVELS TRAFFIC PATTERNS TRAFFIC VOLUME TRANSIT TRANSMISSION TRANSMISSION CAPACITY TRANSMISSION LINE TRANSPORT TRANSPORT CORRIDORS TRANSPORT COSTS TRANSPORT INDICATORS TRANSPORT MARKET TRANSPORT QUALITY TRANSPORT SECTOR TRANSPORTATION UNIVERSAL ACCESS UNIVERSAL SERVICE USER USERS USES VEHICLES VOICE TELEPHONY VOLTAGE WATER CONSUMPTION WATER RESOURCES WATER SERVICES WATER SUPPLY INFRASTRUCTURE WATER TARIFFS WATER UTILITIES WEALTH WEB Despite external shocks, Mali's economy grew by 5.3 percent per year between 2003 and 2006, driven primarily by the telecommunications sector. But Mali's landlocked condition, together with the uneven distribution of population and economic activities between the arid north and the much richer south, defy the country's ability to sustain this pace of growth. Mali depends heavily on regional infrastructure and transport corridors. A strategic focus on regional integration has paid off, and critical institutional decisions are bringing many positive developments. But Mali still faces infrastructure challenges, the starkest of which lies in the power sector. The cost of producing power in Mali is among the highest in the region, with the result that only around 17 percent of the population has access to electricity, much lower than in other low-income African countries. The water and sanitation sectors also represent a challenge, as the nation works to separate the power and water-and-sanitation functions of EDM, the multisector utility. Mali spent about $555 million per year on infrastructure during the late 2000s. A total of $200 million is lost annually to inefficiencies. Assessing spending needs against existing spending and potential efficiency gains leaves an annual funding gap of $283 million per year.Mali 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 over 50 years for Mali to reach these goals. Yet with a combination of increased finance, improved efficiency, and cost-reducing innovations, it should be possible to reduce that time to 15 years. 2012-03-19T18:02:43Z 2012-03-19T18:02:43Z 2011-06-01 http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20110617131046 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3452 English Policy Research working paper ; no. WPS 5688 3234 3527 3473 3322 3238 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa West Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Sahel Mali