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Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal - Politics - Nairaland

Nairaland ForumNairaland GeneralPoliticsNigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal (4113 Views)

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Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Deollaa(op): 7:58am On Apr 14
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According to a Reuters report on Monday, the agreement will formalise political and regulatory commitments for the pipeline, which is designed to transport natural gas from Nigeria across West Africa to Morocco and onward to Europe.

The 6,900-kilometre project, known as the African Atlantic Gas Pipeline, is expected to strengthen regional energy integration and boost export capacity.

Director-General of the Office National des Hydrocarbures et des Mines, Amina Benkhadra, said the agreement would enhance institutional coordination among participating countries.

“An intergovernmental agreement… will be signed this year,” she said, adding that a joint regulatory authority would be established in Nigeria involving representatives from the 13 participating countries.

Project structure
The pipeline, first conceived about a decade ago, has progressed through feasibility studies and front-end engineering design, reflecting renewed momentum despite global financing challenges.

Mrs Benkhadra explained that the project would be executed in phases, allowing segments to become operational independently and deliver early economic benefits.

“The project does not rely on a single global final investment decision… each segment is designed to be developed as a standalone system,” she said.

The pipeline is expected to have a capacity of 30 billion cubic metres annually, with about half allocated for domestic use in Morocco and exports to Europe.

Implementation plan
A joint venture between the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited and Morocco’s hydrocarbons agency will establish a project company to oversee execution, financing, and construction.

While investor interest remains strong, no final funding commitments have been secured, with financing expected to combine equity and debt.

Regional impact
The project, backed by the Economic Community of West African States, is expected to boost electricity generation, industrialization, and economic integration across West Africa.

Initial phases will link Morocco to gas fields in Mauritania and Senegal, while other segments will connect Ghana to Côte d’Ivoire and eventually to Nigeria’s gas reserves.

First gas from the project is projected by 2031.

Strategic significance
The pipeline is seen as a strategic alternative for global gas supply, particularly as Europe seeks to diversify energy sources amid shifting geopolitical dynamics.

For Nigeria, the initiative offers an opportunity to monetise its vast gas reserves, increase non-oil revenue, and strengthen its regional influence.

The planned agreement signals renewed political will to deliver one of Africa’s most ambitious energy infrastructure projects, with the potential to reshape regional energy trade, enhance energy security, and position West Africa as a key player in the global gas market.
Read More here: https://vop.ng/nigeria-morocco-advance-25bn-transcontinental-gas-pipeline-deal/

Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Kushites: 8:09am On Apr 14
This pipeline project is a good move that will raise national revenue and budget and quite possibly double our annual budget from the current $40 billion to perhaps $70 or $80 billion.

BUT we need to ensure we also have sufficient gas for local industrial development, and not focus solely or even mostly on export.

Economic independence is vital. That gas must help to grow local industries that rely on LNG, of which there are many.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by AsomughaChuks02: 8:20am On Apr 14
A very stupid and wasteful project being undertaken by the Nigerian government. The risks involved are not worth the billions of dollars sunk already for a pipeline that will never recover the costs in 100 years. Let Morocco send their ships to Bonny and buy gas.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Hussein035: 8:09am On Apr 15
AsomughaChuks02:
A very stupid and wasteful project being undertaken by the Nigerian government. The risks involved are not worth the billions of dollars sunk already for a pipeline that will never recover the costs in 100 years. Let Morocco send their ships to Bonny and buy gas.
Your region just hate Nigeria irrespective of the progress and that's why you can never succeed in life until this your paranoid is treated in psychiatry
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Nastrademus(m): 8:10am On Apr 15
This is a good development but the project should be handled by an independent foreign contractor, don't give the money to the government else they'll embezzle it
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Kushites: 8:17am On Apr 15
Nastrademus:
This is a good development but the project should be handled by an independent foreign contractor, don't give the money to the government else they'll embezzle it
Why didn't they embezzle the money that built the village school that educated you?
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by opalu: 8:18am On Apr 15
Pipe dream. Won't that pipeline pass through the territory of other nations? What is the guarantee or security of those portions?
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by kufre2010(m): 8:24am On Apr 15
The report said they have finished visibility study. I thought this project they said was almost completed. Billions os $ had already been sunk into it just for visibility study?
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by profmallor: 8:24am On Apr 15
You may have a point. Why run a pipe, considering the level of insecurity in the countries the pipe might run through?


AsomughaChuks02:
A very stupid and wasteful project being undertaken by the Nigerian government. The risks involved are not worth the billions of dollars sunk already for a pipeline that will never recover the costs in 100 years. Let Morocco send their ships to Bonny and buy gas.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by ogolemati: 8:25am On Apr 15
grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin grin more money to the crook from Lagos state the CEO bullion vans manufacturing company

Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Teymanhenry(f): 8:33am On Apr 15
Kushites:
Why didn't they embezzle the money that built the village school that educated you?
Oga we are all Nigerians and we know what our people will do. Independent companies is the way to go. If we want to do business like the Europeans, we gotta think like them. Bring in policies that will curtail any form of irregularities, theft or scams. By so doing we'll be sustainable.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by whitebeard(m): 8:36am On Apr 15
Misplaced Priorities: While the government touts exporting half the gas to Europe and Morocco, millions of Nigerians continue to suffer from an unreliable power grid and soaring domestic energy costs. The administration is essentially prioritizing foreign export contracts over solving the crippling domestic energy crisis right in their own backyard.

The government is committing Nigeria to a $25 billion mega-project without having actual investors locked down. The admission that "no final funding commitments have been secured" and that it will rely heavily on "debt" means the administration is preparing to plunge an already economically strained nation into even deeper borrowing.

The government is taking on billions in debt for "mega-projects" like the gas pipeline without having the final funding fully secured. Who eventually pays for that? The Nigerian taxpayer. Under the guise of "expanding the tax base," the newly formed super-agency—the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS)—has been unleashed to aggressively hunt down domestic revenue. They are essentially shaking down struggling citizens and local businesses to guarantee the sovereign debt being used to fund these massive, kickback-prone infrastructure contracts.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Topman7: 8:37am On Apr 15
opalu:
Pipe dream. Won't that pipeline pass through the territory of other nations? What is the guarantee or security of those portions?
The pipeline runs along the West African coast, not deep into the Sahel.

It passes through about 13 coastal countries like Ghana, Senegal, and Mauritania. In fact, the route was specifically chosen to avoid the unstable Sahel interior (Mali, Burkina Faso, much of Niger). This is a huge difference from the Trans-Saharan pipeline, which goes through Niger and Algeria and faces serious terrorism risks.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Topman7: 8:42am On Apr 15
Teymanhenry:
Oga we are all Nigerians and we know what our people will do. Independent companies is the way to go. If we want to do business like the Europeans, we gotta think like them. Bring in policies that will curtail any form of irregularities, theft or scams. By so doing we'll be sustainable.
You haven't answered the question. ALL THE INFRASTRUCTURE YOU SEE AROUND YOU TODAY, FROM EXPRESSWAYS TO UNIVERSITIES TO AIRPORTS TO STADIUMS TO SHOPPING MALLS TO FLYOVERS, WAS IT NOT MONEY THEY USED TO BUILD THEM?

Why was the money not stolen?
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Emu4life(m): 8:51am On Apr 15
How many times will they sign this agreementhuh
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by SeizeTheMemes: 9:05am On Apr 15
whitebeard:
Misplaced Priorities: While the government touts exporting half the gas to Europe and Morocco, millions of Nigerians continue to suffer from an unreliable power grid and soaring domestic energy costs. The administration is essentially prioritizing foreign export contracts over solving the crippling domestic energy crisis right in their own backyard.

The government is committing Nigeria to a $25 billion mega-project without having actual investors locked down. The admission that "no final funding commitments have been secured" and that it will rely heavily on "debt" means the administration is preparing to plunge an already economically strained nation into even deeper borrowing.

The government is taking on billions in debt for "mega-projects" like the gas pipeline without having the final funding fully secured. Who eventually pays for that? The Nigerian taxpayer. Under the guise of "expanding the tax base," the newly formed super-agency—the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS)—has been unleashed to aggressively hunt down domestic revenue. They are essentially shaking down struggling citizens and local businesses to guarantee the sovereign debt being used to fund these massive, kickback-prone infrastructure contracts.
Didn't they say that our power grid was having gas supply issues now they want to export that remaining gas to Europe. The elite to sell our resources without building anything because the would be too much work I guess. We are an economic colony.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by occfx: 9:15am On Apr 15
Deollaa:
Read More here: https://vop.ng/nigeria-morocco-advance-25bn-transcontinental-gas-pipeline-deal/
Iduoots wey wan supply gas to morrocco no get light ooo. There citizens dey suffer but they wan supply gas give country wey get enough energy just for the Benjamins.

Anybody wey do Nigeria this thing, e no go better for am
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Ttipsy(f): 9:24am On Apr 15
Being hearing this whole story for 4yrs now

Like they meet every year to take pictures??
Jokers
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Gotocourt: 9:27am On Apr 15
AKK don end after coup in Benin-Republic angry
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Teymanhenry(f): 9:35am On Apr 15
Topman7:
You haven't answered the question. ALL THE INFRASTRUCTURE YOU SEE AROUND YOU TODAY, FROM EXPRESSWAYS TO UNIVERSITIES TO AIRPORTS TO STADIUMS TO SHOPPING MALLS TO FLYOVERS, WAS IT NOT MONEY THEY USED TO BUILD THEM?

Why was the money not stolen?
😂 Compare our annual infrastructural budget and that of South Africa, then also compare the quality of infrastructure in both countries. When you do, you'll Nigeria is a mess when it comes to infrastructures.

It's surprising you don't know that monies are syphoned through contractors. The quality of work they do is never commensurate to the money spent
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by LordLicifer(m): 9:54am On Apr 15
Hussein035:
Your region just hate Nigeria irrespective of the progress and that's why you can never succeed in life until this your paranoid is treated in psychiatry
Is this all you have to counter his opinion? grin Paranoid is treated in psychiatry? grin grin You need to go back to school!

Anything reasonable you would like to add?

Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by pinkguy(m): 9:54am On Apr 15
Most Nigeria oil revenue is use to finance terrorism across the world
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by LordLicifer(m): 9:55am On Apr 15
AsomughaChuks02:
A very stupid and wasteful project being undertaken by the Nigerian government. The risks involved are not worth the billions of dollars sunk already for a pipeline that will never recover the costs in 100 years. Let Morocco send their ships to Bonny and buy gas.
Absolutely! Waste of money, it would never ever come to pass anyway.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Leepeak(m): 10:05am On Apr 15
Online investment

$25b ke lol 😂😂😂😂
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by samomoli: 10:59am On Apr 15
When will this deal come to fruition. Every government is signing this deal. Talk less , lets see action.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by zoedew: 12:02pm On Apr 15
Deollaa:
Read More here: https://vop.ng/nigeria-morocco-advance-25bn-transcontinental-gas-pipeline-deal/
When it comes to having our gas, though for valuable consideration, Morocco will not racially discriminate against Blacks! Morocco is noted worldwide for discriminating against blacks racially and for being inclined to Europe than it is to Africa for obvious reasons! Anti-black racism exists in Morocco, affecting both Black Moroccans and sub-Saharan African migrants, with deep-seated roots in historical slavery and societal prejudices. While the government has implemented some reforms, reports show Black people in Morocco face discrimination, harassment, and social marginalization.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by Reference(m): 12:17pm On Apr 15
Laying a pipeline through countries that are poorer than you... good luck to that. Nothing more to add. You know me and gas are not friends. Look at the economic devastation through skyhigh energy costs here in Nigeria.

Just hope by the time, perhaps in decades when the pipeline will have reached Morocco Europe will not have gone totally green and cut their gas demands.

I think there are far better ways to spend and better things to spend our money on.
Re: Nigeria, Morocco Advance $25 Billion Transcontinental Gas Pipeline Deal by victorv12(m): 2:32pm On Apr 15
Kushites:
This pipeline project is a good move that will raise national revenue and budget and quite possibly double our annual budget from the current $40 billion to perhaps $70 or $80 billion.

BUT we need to ensure we also have sufficient gas for local industrial development, and not focus solely or even mostly on export.

Economic independence is vital. That gas must help to grow local industries that rely on LNG, of which there are many.
It’s misleading. With the ongoing crises in Europe and the Middle East, what you’re suggesting won’t really benefit Nigeria, it could even create more problems for us. Our biggest challenge isn’t just increasing national revenue, it’s improving the welfare of Nigerians and building our economy locally.
For years, the macroeconomic approach hasn’t translated into real benefits for ordinary citizens. The main beneficiaries tend to be foreign investors, top civil servants, and politicians. If Nigeria were truly industrialized, would we be exporting crude oil and gas without strong local value addition?
How many functional factories are actually operating at scale in the country? Meanwhile, we still struggle to generate even 5,000 megawatts of electricity for over 200 million people. That alone shows how deep the structural issues are.
Raising national revenue and expanding the budget sounds good on paper, but what about the everyday Nigerian? Economic policies should prioritize real development and improved living conditions, not just bigger figures.
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