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Nigeria aims for African, European gas markets

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By Jeph Ajobaju, Chief Copy Editor

Nigeria aims to sell gas across the Sahara and in Europe through the Ajaokuta, Kaduna, Kano Gas Pipeline (AKK gas pipeline) being constructed to augment receipts from oil, currently the main foreign exchange earner.

“The plan is if we can get it to Kano, then it can continue all the way to Algeria at the Trans-Saharan gas pipeline and then link up with the Algerian pipeline and then we move it to Europe,” said Minister of State for Petroleum, Timipre Sylva.

“So, our gas can move all the way from the South to the European market. So, it is a very important piece of infrastructure and the president is very committed to it and it is very much on track.”

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Sylva told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) that the pipeline is one of the legacy projects of the administration of President Muhammadu Buhari and it will serve as a development backbone along the Southern-Northern corridors.

“AKK gas pipeline is good for producers and the market because we have a lot of situations where gas is capped in the South and not produced because there is no market.

“But what we want to do now is to bring the gas across Nigeria, so that when you are now moving gas from South to North, all the people along that corridor can key into that pipeline.

“What that means is that people will have access to gas anywhere in Nigeria. It will also enable Nigerians to invest in a gas-based industry anywhere in Nigeria.

“This is also good for the producer because he now has incentives to produce more. Before now, the gas in the South was capped but with this backbone, anybody can produce and link up with the AKK pipeline.”

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Elimination of gas flaring

According to Sylva – as the NAN story is reported by PREMIUM TIMES – the AKK Gas Pipeline will eliminate gas flaring completely as it will absorb the remaining 8 per cent currently being flared.

His words: “Today as we speak on gas flaring, it is so much exaggerated. Gas flaring has been reduced to about 8 per cent. We have taken down about 92 per cent of flares.

“Gas flaring is no longer the major problem of our communities today. There has been a lot of monetisation on gas.

“All the gas that was going into NLNG was previously flared, all the gas going into the power plants was previously flared, and there is a lot of gas also being re-injected into the ground so that we don’t flare it.

“We also use some of the gas to spike crude oil, so we have found a lot of use for gas which brought flaring down to 8 per cent, but people still exaggerate it.

“Before now in my own community, I saw the flares in the horizon when I stood by the Atlantic, but today it’s no more.”

Sylva urged Niger Delta communities to tap into opportunities created by gas utilisation projects and stop complaining about the dangers of gas flaring which has almost been eliminated.

“Gas flaring is no longer a problem in the Niger Delta, 8 per cent of gas being flared cannot be the problem.

“If I don’t know what to do with my gas that is when I flare, but if I can monetise my gas, why should I burn it when I can make money out of it.

“In fact, it is in my interest not to burn my gas because it now has value. The problem with gas before was that it had no value because nobody was buying it.

“But now, if I can monetise it, I will be guarding it so that I can get some benefits from it.”

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