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Syrians struggling with huge hike in electricity prices


Syrian women walk past a privately owned generator in the Ain Tarma neighborhood on the eastern outskirts of Damascus, the capital, on Nov. 4, 2025. (Credit: Louai Beshara/AFP)

In his workshop near the Syrian capital, blacksmith Ghassan Aama cannot fathom the massive hike in electricity prices even as much of the country continues to face power cuts.

The Energy Ministry hiked prices by up to 6,000 percent last month, sending shockwaves through a population already reeling from decades of sanctions and 14 years of war.

"We were surprised to see electricity prices rise, as our income is limited," said Aama.

"If the bills are high, we might not be able to make ends meet," he added.

Aama already pays a subscription to a private generator so he can run his workshop, a common practice in a country whose electricity sector has been ravaged by civil war, with power cuts lasting up to 20 hours a day.

"We are coming out of a war, and our homes are destroyed ... We were hoping things would get better, not worse," he added.

Further liberalization

Since the toppling of longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December, Syria has slowly begun to emerge from decades of political and economic isolation. 

The new Islamist authorities are hoping to attract funding and investments for reconstruction, which the World Bank estimated could cost more than $216 billion.

The government's decision to hike tariffs is part of a policy of liberalization that the government seems to have adopted at the start of the year, said Jihad Yazigi, editor of economic publication The Syria Report.

"What they are doing, basically, is just trying to cut costs and to remove subsidies," he added.

Contrary to what Assad claimed, the Syrian economy was "obviously not a socialist economy," Yazigi said. 

It was "relatively liberal ... and here [they] are liberalizing further," he said, as they also lifted subsidies on bread earlier this year.

'No one will pay'

But having borne the brunt of the country's crippled economy for years, Syrians are struggling to accept yet another blow. 

"After liberation, we expected people to return and reconstruction to take place quickly," said Muhieddine Salam, a real estate agent.

"Now, if rent is $200 and the electricity tariff is between $200 and $400, what will I do?"

Vendor Alaa Mussa shared his frustration, arguing that "no one will pay, no one has the money." 

"Let them turn the electricity off, it would be better," she told AFP.

"There are no jobs, and all factories are closed ... [At first] Everyone was happy, we thought money would start coming in, but no one expected this to happen."

Syria previously announced major investment agreements with countries in the region to rebuild infrastructure.

It also announced major agreements with Qatar and Turkey to supply it with gas for electricity production.

But these projects have yet to make a dent in the daily lives of Syrians.

Nine out of 10 people in the country live in poverty, and one in four is unemployed, according to the United Nations.

Many of them resort to informal, temporary jobs to survive, like Umm al-Zein, 43, who sells bread on the street.

"I can barely afford to pay my son's university tuition and my daughter's private lessons for the high school exam," she said.

"The electricity barely comes on for an hour, and if the electricity doesn't come on, the water doesn't come on either."

"We will be warming ourselves under blankets in the winter."

In his workshop near the Syrian capital, blacksmith Ghassan Aama cannot fathom the massive hike in electricity prices even as much of the country continues to face power cuts.The Energy Ministry hiked prices by up to 6,000 percent last month, sending shockwaves through a population already reeling from decades of sanctions and 14 years of war."We were surprised to see electricity prices rise, as our income is limited," said Aama."If the bills are high, we might not be able to make ends meet," he added.Aama already pays a subscription to a private generator so he can run his workshop, a common practice in a country whose electricity sector has been ravaged by civil war, with power cuts lasting up to 20 hours a day."We are coming out of a war, and our homes are destroyed ... We were hoping things would get better,...