Site icon businessstandardsng.com

Senegal, Pitches Its Gas As European Alternative To Russia Supply

Timipre Sylva

Senegal, Pitches Its Gas As European Alternative To Russia Supply

…as lack of investment, security hunt Nigeria

 

Senegal, Nigeria’s West African neighbour is positioning itself as an alternative source of gas for Europe as Russia cuts supplies of the fuel.

Nigeria on the other hand with a more enormous reserve of gas resources is having some difficulties in finding investors that would come and invest in it, because of insecurity in the Niger Delta. Nigeria is regarded as a gas province but it has not been able ti full advantage of this because of insecurity and lack of investment.

“Senegal will be able to sell its quota to Europe, especially Germany already, in the second half of 2024,” Mamadou Fall Kane, deputy permanent secretary of COZ-Petrogas, a government committee that monitors and develops oil and gas projects, said by phone Thursday from the capital, Dakar.

The war in Ukraine has shown how reliant Europe is on natural gas to produce power. Before the conflict began in February, Russia provided as much as 40% of Europe’s gas needs. Those countries are scrambling to cut deals across the Middle East and Africa amid a spike in prices as Russia reduces supplies.

European Union officials traveled to Dakar in February to meet Kane. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz followed with a visit to the West African nation in May to pursue gas and renewable-energy projects. At that time, Kane was unable to give Scholz a clear answer on when it would be able to start supplies as the government had previously agreed to send its first gas to Southeast Asian nations, under contracts signed in 2018.

“A few days ago, we didn’t have any visibility as to whether or not we could supply Europe with gas before 2027,” Kane said. “Now we can say we’ll be able to reroute our cargo to Europe starting 2024.

Production at Senegal’s Greater Tortue Ahmeyim gas project is scheduled to start next year. The offshore field straddling the border between Senegal and Mauritania is set to produce 2.5 million tons of liquefied natural gas in the first phase, which will double to 5 million tons in the second phase.

Final investment decisions for phase 2 of the GTA project should be made by September and for the deepwater Yakaar-Teranga project later this year, Kane said. A recent European Union decision to label gas investments as climate-friendly would make it easier to attract financing, he said.

“We’re in a very good dynamic,” he said. “Institutionally our policies align with those of the European Union, as well. So all the stars are aligned.”

Kosmos Energy, co-developing the GTA field with BP, said phase one is 80% complete earlier this month, with first gas expected in the third quarter of 2023 and first LNG at the end of next year.

Source: Energy Voices

ENERGY VOICE

Exit mobile version