Africa-Press – Malawi. Malawians are facing the prospect of a sharp increase in pump prices after global crude oil prices surged by as much as 40 percent following the US-Israel- Iran war.
The development puts enormous pressure on Malawi’s Automatic Pricing Mechanism and threatens to unravel the country’s fragile inflation outlook.
Brent crude prices rose from $72.48 per barrel on February 28—the day the war started—to $101.51 on March 24, representing a 40 percent jump, while the West Texas Intermediate climbed 34.9 percent from $67.02 to $90.38 over the same period.
Brent is the European benchmark extracted from the North Sea, while West Texas Intermediate is the US benchmark sourced primarily from Texas fields.
The conflict has triggered the largest supply disruption in the history of the global oil market, with shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries around 20 percent of global oil consumption, reduced to a trickle, pushing crude oil prices above $100 per barrel and driving even sharper increases in refined products such as diesel and petrol.
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The Malawi Energy Regulatory Authority (Mera) had already acknowledged the gathering storm.
In its February 2026 price review statement, Mera Board Chairperson Lucas Kondowe warned that: “the current conflict in the Middle East is exerting upward pressure on the world prices of petroleum products.”
He noted, at the time, that increases were not yet significant enough to trigger a price adjustment.
Pump prices in Malawi remained unchanged at K4,965 per litre for petrol and K4,945 per litre for diesel, last adjusted on January 20, 2026.
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Under the Automatic Pricing Mechanism, a price revision is triggered when landed costs move beyond a plus or minus five percent band.
When contacted for a response, Mera spokesperson Fitina Khonje said the authority was still assessing the situation.
“We will inform the media and the nation once a review is concluded and a determination made,” Khonje said.
Economics Association of Malawi President Bertha Chikadza said a rise in global crude prices would inevitably feed into the cost of living for ordinary Malawians.
“Any rise in global prices will likely lead to not only higher transport costs but also increased production costs for manufacturers. Slowing economic activity could hinder overall growth,” Chikadza said.
She called on the government to deploy the Price Stabilisation Fund to cushion the immediate blow rather than passing the full increase on to consumers at once, while urging a long-term shift toward rail transport to reduce fuel import costs.
Economist Marvin Banda warned that the impact of rising global fuel prices on Malawi was not hypothetical but immediate and potentially catastrophic.
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