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he Federal Government is planning to
construct the longest pipeline in the country from Calabar via Ajaokuta to Kano
State. This is as it said that gas flaring has dropped to 11 percent- gas
flaring level stood at about 25 percent two years ago.
This is part of efforts at ensuring steady
supply of gas to meet the growing market demand for the product.
Diezani Alison-Madueke, minister of petroleum
resources, disclosed these while delivering a paper titled, ‘Encouraging
Investment in Gas Production, Supply and Consumption’, at a 3-day national
conference on gas resources organised by the Senate Committee on Gas Resources
in Abuja.
“By the end of the year, we will be
commencing, via public private partnership (PPP) scheme, the nation’s longest
pipeline from Calabar via Ajaokuta to Kano State,” Alison-Madueke said.
Represented by Andrew Yakubu, the group
managing director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), the
minister said that at present the Federal Government was constructing the
strategic East-West pipeline, while the Lagos end of the Escravos to Lagos
Pipelines System (ELPS) is nearing completion.
She explained that almost 500km of new gas
pipelines have been completed and commissioned, including the doubling of the
capacity of the EPLS between Escravos and Oben and the extension from Oben to
Geregu and River Imo to Alaoji, respectively.
The minister said that by the end of 2018,
the backbone pipeline infrastructure for gas would have been delivered,
concluding an initial phase of over 2,500km of gas pipeline infrastructure
development.
She further observed that government was
strategising to leverage on the full potential of gas to achieve massive impact
on the economy and the national Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
“We are focused on jumpstarting gas supply to
enable usage in gas to power, gas based industrialisation, compressed natural
gas for transportation and commercial usage, cooking gas for domestic usage and
regional pipeline for gas export,” she said.
She further observed that for government to
support the aggressive short-term demand growth in the power sector, a domestic
gas supply obligation regulation which mandates a certain amount of gas supply
for the domestic market, pending the full maturation of the market was
introduced.
She expressed confidence that the market
would ultimately drive itself for supply growth, adding that the long run
expectation was for less dependence on supply via obligation.
In order to boost investor confidence in
natural gas in the country, she said government has reviewed the contractual
framework for gas through the development of world-class standardised gas
supply agreements in addition to Network Code which governs the flow of gas
across the nation’s pipeline network and provides rules for open access.
She said that the use of natural gas instead
of petrol, has translated into significant savings for over 4,000 taxi drivers
in Benin, who are already using this alternative energy source.
In the same vein, the minister said that the
federal government’s efforts at eliminating gas flaring was making significant
impact as flare out rate dropped from 25% to 11% of production.
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