Home Oil & Gas Nigeria will have gas supply shortage by 2023 — SNEPCo

Nigeria will have gas supply shortage by 2023 — SNEPCo

Advertisement

The Managing Director of Shell Nigeria Exploration and Production Company (SNEPCo), Elohor Aiboni, has projected that Nigeria will have a three billion cubic feet per day gas supply shortage by 2030.

Speaking at the 2023 edition of the annual conference of the Nigerian Council of the Society of Petroleum Engineers in Lagos, Aiboni said despite having the largest proved gas reserves in Africa, “Nigeria could see gas demand outstripping gas supply by 2030 by at least three billion cubic feet per day.”

According to Aiboni, who was represented by SNEPCo Finance Manager, Tunde Oduwole, the gas supply shortage would be driven by an estimated increase in population, dwindling infrastructure, security climate and access to energy.

She advised Nigeria and other African countries to continue to improve on fiscal terms, the political climate, energy policies and contractual terms to make them attractive to investors and energy companies.

The SNEPCo boss also urged African countries to take deliberate steps to attract foreign direct investments to harness their vast gas resources, because of the huge amount of capital required for gas reserve development.

She urged the continent to put in place liberal trade, fiscal policies, and a stable social, political and economic environment, to attract investments in its gas sector.

Aiboni said while Africa’s oil and gas sector promised opportunities for FDI, such capital would “preferentially go to countries with more stable macro-economic policy environment, low or moderate inflation, stable interest rates, stable or predictable exchange rates, easy access to foreign exchange and minimal capital controls.”

Referring to recently published statistics from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, she said there was a decline in FDI in Africa from $80bn in 2021 to about $45bn in 2022.

The situation, she said, indicated a worrying gap in investments as developing countries worked to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.

According to Aiboni, the inflow of FDI had been impacted by global commitments to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and the drive by hydrocarbon resource-poor countries to reduce dependence on fossil fuels and accelerate the development of renewable energy.

“It is imminent now more than ever that oil and gas producing countries in Africa take actionable steps to create enabling environments, improve access to available capital pools, and attract the right skills and capabilities that could both meet the energy needs of our developing populations and position us strongly in a new energy landscape,” she said.

Advertisement

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.