Kenya fuel prices rise sharply despite reduction in tax due to Iran war
Kenya has significantly increased fuel prices, with diesel rising by a record 40 shillings per liter and petrol by 28 shillings, despite a reduction in value-added tax. The Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (Epra) attributes the rise to increased global oil and shipping costs, influenced by the conflict in Iran.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedKenya has significantly increased fuel prices, with diesel rising by a record 40 shillings per liter and petrol by 28 shillings, despite a reduction in value-added tax. The Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (Epra) attributes the rise to increased global oil and shipping costs, influenced by the conflict in Iran. These new prices are effective until the next review on May 14th. Fuel shortages have been reported in some areas, though the government denies widespread scarcity. The price increase coincides with an ongoing investigation into a controversial, allegedly substandard fuel consignment imported outside government agreements, leading to arrests and resignations of energy officials. Epra maintains this disputed consignment was not factored into the current price calculation.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedThe Energy and Petroleum Regulatory Authority (Epra) said the disputed consignment had not been included in the computation of the new prices.
The government cut value added tax to 13% from 16%.
Petrol rose by 28 shillings to a similar level.
Diesel prices rose by 40 Kenya shillings to 206 a litre.
Kenya has sharply raised the cost of petroleum.