Tag: Natural Gas

  • Ekpo: Natural gas key to addressing Africa’s energy deficit

    Ekpo: Natural gas key to addressing Africa’s energy deficit

    Africa’s energy deficit has been described as a pressing challenge that requires immediate attention. This was the submission of the Minister of State for Petroleum Resources (Gas), Ekperikpe Ekpo, at the Nigerian International Energy Summit (NIES), which began in Abuja, yesterday.

    The minister, who noted that natural gas is pivotal in bridging the energy deficit gap, said that as a transition fuel between traditional fossil fuels and renewable energy sources, natural gas is poised to play a crucial role in Africa’s energy landscape, offering a viable solution to the continent’s pressing energy challenges.

    Ekpo further stressed that energy remains essential for industrialisation, economic growth, and human development. He, however, he noted that millions of Africans, including Nigerians, lack reliable electricity.

    With Africa’s abundant gas reserves, Ekpo said it was imperative to maximise this resource to power industries, electrify communities and drive socio-economic development.

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    A statement issued by the Spokesman for Minister, Louis Ibah, noted the Minister’s advocacy for strategic policies and regulatory frameworks to drive investments and accelerate the deployment of clean energy solutions. Besides, he also suggested prioritising robust policy and regulatory frameworks, including regional collaboration, gas monetisation, and public-private partnerships (PPPs).

    “Africa’s energy transformation requires a collective commitment. Governments, investors, and development partners must work together to remove bottlenecks and accelerate energy access through innovation, technology, and strategic investments,” he said.

    Ekpo highlighted Nigeria’s progress in this area, citing the Decade of Gas Initiative, which aims to position gas as a key driver of the country’s energy transition.

    “We are implementing key reforms and infrastructure projects to ensure that gas becomes a catalyst for widespread electrification and industrialisation,” he said.

  • Natural Gas is bridge to Nigeria’s industrial future, says Optimera Energy

    Natural Gas is bridge to Nigeria’s industrial future, says Optimera Energy

    Managing Director, Optimera Energy, Mrs. Audrey Joe-Ezigbo has called for more collaborations and concerted efforts to harness Nigeria’s vast natural gas reserves to drive national industrialisation.

    According to her, with over 200 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) of natural gas reserves, Nigeria has the potential to drive industrialisation, economic expansion, and job creation.

    She noted that while government has taken significant steps to address many challenges, including the introduction of the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) and the Decade of Gas Initiative, the country needs to bridge infrastructure gaps to fully unlock the potential.

    “These policies are a game-changer. They provide the regulatory and fiscal frameworks needed to attract investment and accelerate the development of Nigeria’s gas sector.”

     The real challenge lies not in the abundance of resources but in the infrastructure required to harness them effectively.

    “Industries are still dependent on costly and environmentally harmful fuel sources because the gas distribution network is inadequate,” she explained.

    “This limits productivity and slows economic progress. To unlock the full potential of our natural gas reserves, we need to address this infrastructure deficit head-on,” Joe-Ezigbo said.

    She pointed out that Nigeria’s energy wealth is constrained by insufficient gas processing facilities, inadequate pipeline networks, and last-mile distribution gaps.

    Said she: “To achieve uninterrupted power supply and large-scale industrial expansion, Nigeria requires over $100 billion in investment. This includes developing non-associated gas fields, upgrading transmission and distribution infrastructure, and enhancing collection efficiency.

    “However, attracting this level of investment is no easy task. The lack of long-term financing for upstream projects and increasing technical and commercial losses in the power sector continue to discourage investors.

    “We need policy consistency and regulatory clarity to create an environment where investors feel confident to commit their resources”.

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    One example of how this challenge is being addressed can be seen in the Lagos Free Zone (LFZ), a thriving industrial hub that houses multinational corporations such as Kellogg’s, Raffles Oil, and Colgate.

    “The Zone offers businesses an unparalleled operational advantage,” Mrs. Joe-Ezigbo explained. “With world-class infrastructure, a streamlined single-clearance business window, and seamless access to global markets, it’s a catalyst for industrial growth.”

    She also highlighted the strategic significance of the Lekki Deep Sea Port, located within the Zone. “The port facilitates efficient importation of raw materials and exportation of finished products, making the Zone a critical node for regional and international trade.”

    However, what makes the LFZ truly unique is its energy strategy. “The Zone is transitioning to cleaner and more reliable energy sources, with natural gas at the core of this shift,” she said. “This is where companies like ours come in. By developing the necessary infrastructure, we’re ensuring that industries within the Zone have access to a sustainable and cost-effective energy supply.”

    At the heart of this transformation is Optimera Energy, an indigenous consortium comprising Falcon Corporation Limited, FHN Gas Limited, and ND Western Midstream Limited. With expertise spanning the entire gas value chain, the company is bridging the energy gap by delivering clean, cost-effective, and efficient natural gas solutions to industries and communities.

    Through its 20-year Gas Infrastructure Development Agreement with the Lagos Free Zone Authority, Optimera Energy is building a 25MMscf/d City Gate Station and a 10-inch, 6.5km gas pipeline connecting the NNPC Gas Infrastructure Company Limited (NGIC) facility to the Zone. With over $30 million invested and First Gas delivery scheduled for Q2 2025, the company is playing a pivotal role in Nigeria’s clean energy transition.

    As Nigeria transitions toward cleaner and more reliable energy sources, natural gas remains the fuel of the future. “The journey to a cleaner, more prosperous Nigeria has begun,” Mrs. Joe-Ezigbo said. “But to truly achieve energy security, we need to move from policy discussions to execution. Large-scale investments in gas field development, transmission infrastructure, and distribution networks are critical to closing Nigeria’s energy gap.”

    She also stressed the importance of collaboration. “No single entity can solve Nigeria’s energy challenges alone. It requires a collective effort from the public and private sectors. Companies that embrace natural gas as a key component of their energy strategy will be well-positioned to lead in this new era.”

    Joe-Ezigbo’s vision for Nigeria’s energy future is clear. “Pipelines and processing plants are just the foundation. True energy security comes from a system that guarantees long-term industrial growth, economic expansion, and a future powered by gas.” As she aptly put it, “Natural gas is the bridge to Nigeria’s industrial future. The time to act is now. Businesses that align with this vision will not only survive but thrive in the years to come.”

  • Natural gas to unlock Africa’s potential, says Baru

    The Group Managing Director of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation, Dr. Maikanti Baru, has said that the enormous natural gas reserves in Africa is capable of unlocking the huge natural resource potentials, such as gold, diamond, iron ore and steel in the continent, to enable a wide range of industrial clusters built around petrochemical, manufacturing, agro-business and fertilizer production.

    He disclosed this while delivering the 36th Monthly Gas Lecture held at the Headquarters of the Gas Exporting Countries Forum (GECF) in Doha, Qatar, on Thursday.

    The NNPC GMD, who was represented at the occasion by NNPC Chief Operating Officer, Gas & Power, Engr. Saidu Mohammed, spoke on the theme “Natural Gas: Catalyst for Africa’s Economic Development and Integration.”

    The NNPC made this known in a statement on Thursday.

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    The delegation also included Nigeria’s Country representative to the GECF, Mr. Bala Wunti, amongst members.
    According to the statement, Baru said Africa’s huge gas reserves currently stood at about 614 TCF, even as Nigeria had the continent’s largest reserves with 199TCF, Algeria (159TCF) and Mozambique (100TCF) occupying the second and third positions respectively.

    According to Baru, GECF member-countries currently produced 93% of Africa’s natural gas, a significant assurance which highlighted the continent’s future in the natural gas landscape.

    The GMD explained that the focus in gas development in Africa was to intensify efforts in in-continent conversion which would ensure value addition across the entire natural gas value chain, with a view to improving the continent’s economy.

    He said in deliberately channelling natural gas development towards meeting up with domestic and export aspirations, Nigeria’s strategic plan had been hinged on three key areas.

    “This focus will be on developing natural gas to meet Nigeria’s gas-to-power aspirations, gas-based industrialization and harnessing our gas for export credentials.

    Describing the unprecedented power demand growth in West and Central Africa as a big opportunity for investors, Dr. Baru stressed that the additional 3600MW power plants currently being developed along the corridors of Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) gas pipeline would stimulate economic activities and impact significantly on the stability of the Nigeria’s power grid.

    He affirmed that Nigeria had grown domestic gas supply capacity to 1.7bscfd with plans to increase capacity to 2bscfd at the completion of some short term gas supply projects by 2019.

    He further observed that Nigeria was on the verge of taking Final Investment Decision (FID) for additional 8MTPA NLNG Train 7 Plant, a move that would see to the expansion of the country’s existing 22MTPA NLNG Plant.

  • Natural gas production rises by 8 per cent, says NNPC

    The Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) has declared that 230.35 Billion Cubic Feet (BCF) of natural gas was produced in July.

    The corporation, in its Monthly Financial and Operations report for July, said the production averaged a daily output of 7,678.17 million Standard Cubic Feet (mmscfd).

    It said the sum represented 8.81 per cent increase compared to the previous month, June 2018.

    The report indicated that for the period July 2017 to July 2018, 3,084.09 BCF of gas was produced, representing an average daily production of 7,834.62 mmscfd.

    It added that the daily average natural gas supply to gas power plants stood at 744.86 mmscfd, equivalent to power generation of 2,898 MW.

    It explained that from the period to date, production from Joint Ventures (JVs), Production Sharing Contracts (PSCs) and Nigerian Petroleum Development Company (NPDC) contributed about 69.38 per cent, 21.69 per cent and 8.93 per cent respectively to the total national gas production

    A further breakdown of the numbers showed that out of the total volume of gas supplied in July 2018, 127.19 BCF of gas was commercialised, comprising 35.55 BCF and 91.65 BCF for the domestic and export market.

    “This translates to a total supply of 1,184.81 mmscfd of gas to the domestic market and 3,055.00 mmscfd of gas supplied to the export market for the month.

    “It implies that 55.98 per cent of the average daily gas produced was commercialised, while the balance of 44.02 per cent was re-injected, used as upstream fuel gas or flared,’’ it said

    On Gas Flaring, the report said gas flare rate was 9.33 per cent, (706.96mmscfd), compared with average gas flare rate of 10.44 per cent ( 816.73mmscfd) for the period July 2017 to July 2018.

    The Report also revealed that the corporation continued to ensure increased PMS supply and distribution across the country to sustain seamless distribution of petroleum products and zero fuel queue across the nation.

  • Embracing natural gas as fuel

    Embracing natural gas as fuel

    Nigeria has a huge gas reserve which it is not using. Rather than flare the gas, experts say it can be used for vehicular mobility. Welcome to the age of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG), writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    It is becoming fashionable to see  vehicles bearing CNG stickers in the nation’s metropolis. This is more pronounced in Benin City, the Edo State capital, and Lagos, where the nation’s flagship gas downstream retail outlet NIPCO Plc has presence.

    CNG is accronym for the Compressed Natural Gas, and it means those vehicles have been converted to  use gas as fuel.

    It also means that gradually, Nigeria is joining the list of developing nations using their gas reserve for fuel. As at the last count, the world has over 23 million such vehicles in 86 countries. Of these, Nigeria, despite its huge gas reserve estimated at trillions of cubic metres, has about 5,000 vehicles with converted engines. This means the government is lax in fashioning policies that could promote this new, cleaner fuel option via the adoption of policies encouraging importation and vehicle assembly plants now dotting the country.

    While successive governments battle subsidising the huge cash differentials in fuel import, the gas sub-sector with its huge potential to power a cleaner, safer and more environmental friendly economy hibernates.

    But this wasn’t supposed to be so. Since it was licenced in 2009 by the Obasanjo administration to pioneer gas downstream retailing, the Nigerian Independent Petroleum Company (NIPCO) Plc, an association of local major oil marketers,  has continued to strategise on getting Nigerians to embrace CNG’s use for vehicle fuel.

    Between Benin, where it began its pilot scheme and Lagos, NIPCO has raised 5000 new users of the cleaner fuel, with 4,500 users operating within the Benin axis alone.

    Though NIPCO would boast that CNG, which remains its core focus has come to stay in Nigeria, as it aims at not only providing alternative fuel to petrol and diesel, its targeted is hazardous carbon emissions that have negatively impacted on the environment.

    In the last eight years, NIPCO has pioneered the innovation of powering vehicles by gas.

    Nigeria is joining other developing nations, such as Iran, China, Argentina, Pakistan, Brazil, India and Bangladesh in powering vehicles with a cleaner energy source in which they were hugely blessed. The difference is that while Nigerians continue to prevaricate, other countries continue to break new grounds, with Iran (4.1 million), China (3.9 million), Pakistan 3.7 million), Brazil (1.9 million), India (1.8 million) and Bangladesh (0.2 million) vehicles.

    With its abundant resource, Nigeria has enormous potential to grow more CNG vehicles even as NIPCO said it  has 10 CNG refuelling stations nationwide.

    In Lagos for instance, NIPCO world- class filling station at Ibafo, Ogun State, along the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, has continued to witness impressive patronage of commercial local and intercity buses, light and heavy duty trucks and private vehicle owners.

    Some factors, chief among which is the cost profile sources, said may however, impede widespread of CNG.

    Findings at NIPCO showed that conversion of petrol or diesel vehicles to CNG compatible costs between N200,000 and N300,000 depending on the choice of kits. The good news is that the conversion comes with a flexible instalment repayment package.

    Under the package, motorists pay an initial deposit of N20,000 for the conversion kits while the balance is deducted through subsequent purchase of gas refill. As good as this may sound, the opportunity is dogged by mass ignorance. “Poor awareness is one of the banes of the CNG use,” a lawyer, Mr Andrew Adewale, who took his vehicle for conversion at NIPCO station at Ibafo said.

    He claimed he just got wind of the conversion opportunity, despite being a regular user of the road and seeing the CNG station for as long as it has been sited there.

    Besides poor awareness, absence of national policy on natural gas utilisation, especially as a vehicular fuel, may be another major hindrance, just as the inability of NIPCO and the Nigerian Gas Company (NGC) Joint Venture to develop new flow lines across the country may be a fatal flaw that may inhibit the CNG spread.

    A safety and logistics expert Mr. Patrick Adenusi noted that the lack of; a bold and far reaching gas policy, poor infrastructure architecture, pricing and government support will continue to negatively affect Nigeria’s CNG expansion.

    Experts said CNG is cheaper on a mile-to-mile basis than petrol by as much as 50 percent and more than 80 percent compared to diesel. While the price of PMS per litre is N145, a metric cube cost of CNG is N95 in Lagos and N90 in Benin.

    Because it is a clean fuel which burns with low carbon deposit, natural gas leaves no lead or benzene on the engine. The lead fouling of spark plugs is also eliminated.

    The CNG kits and systems are sealed, which prevents any spill or evaporation. The use of natural gas eliminates the need for expensive oil refineries, improves energy choice flexibility, reduces movement of heavy tankers on roads resulting in reduced improved energy security due to local availability. Also, it reduces the importation of petroleum products, which saves foreign exchange, stimulates local industry and creates employment opportunities for the production of conversion kits and components, such as the manufacturing of cylinders, and other kits, establishments of vehicle conversion and maintenance workshops and the reduction in health hazards through improved air quality.

    NIPCO’s Managing Director Mr. Sanjay Teotia, x-raying the challenges, the values and the future of CNG at a gas summit last week in Lagos, said Nigeria cannot be an exception because there has been an increased global support for natural gas transportation. He said the policy and regulatory support were, however, needed to create incentives that would be at par with other fuels.

    Teotia noted that to underscore the global relevance of natural gas as a sustainable transportation fuel, light duty vehicles, such as cars and SUVs, as well as heavy duty vehicles, were being produced by major vehicle manufacturers.

    He said embracing CNG would reduce dependence on imported oil, save valuable foreign exchange, reduce subsidy burden on the government and ensure better utilisation of Nigeria’s domestic gas.

    With one million vehicles on natural gas, the government, he noted, would save $1.5 billion, which could have been used in buying four billion litres of PMS yearly. Between 2012 and 2016, Nigeria, he further disclosed, saved about $10 million by GGL.

     

    Recommendations

     

    Teotia said some regulatory reforms might be required to stimulate fresh investments in the gas sector. This, according to him, were aimed at generating clear strategic plan that would ensure that the government increased the share of natural gas in the fuel mix, and the establishment of a strong regime of the government commitment liberal licensing for setting up CNG dispensing stations, investments in widespread availability of natural gas through a well-established pipeline distribution network, a waiver regime of customs duties on natural gas vehicles (NGVs), subsidy to owners  on vehicle conversion.

    Other regulatory frameworks that would encourage NGV are the introduction of NGV in public transportation system – taxi fleet, mass transit buses and the mandate to use NGVs in all ministries, departments and agencies of government whether local, state or federal.

    Experts said for a CNG policy to be effective, CNG-dispensing stations have to be tied to the gas pipeline network which exists only in the South, that is, East and West domestic gas network and conscious efforts should be put by the government to ensure gas pipeline availability across the country.

    Teotia said the government might also need to put a price cap range to encourage gas use. According to him, a price gap of six to 37 per cent difference between petrol and CNG does not appear to be compelling, as the subsidy on petrol erodes the long-term economic benefit of CNG.

    He called for the adoption of CNG to be market operator-set, where price per energy would be equivalent of a litre of petrol, in a manner to encourage conversion, along with a dual pricing structure similar to Argentina, where credit lines cover conversion costs, to be repaid with savings from the use of CNG.

    Motorists said the CNG was economical, if the cost of conversion was addressed. Jimoh Akinsanmi, a commercial driver, who has been using a CNG commercial bus since 2013, said it saves money and it is cost effective.

    Outside the cost of conversion, he spends N2,600 on liquefied gas to shuttle between Lagos to Ibadan. Hitherto, that distance cost him N7,000 on petrol.

    Solomon Ola, a heavy duty truck driver said he had known some peace since the fleet operator of the truck he  drives switched to CNG. ‘’I can take a full tank, which comprises eight large gas compressors to Kwara State and back. This costs on the average N25,000 compared tp the N45,000 we  spent on diesel on same route,’’ he said.

    A commercial driver, Paul, who shuttles between Lagos and Mowe, in Ogun State, wants commercial operators to convert to gas because it is “a cheaper alternative compared to petrol.” For him, “CNG is a bonanza, especially for commercial motorists.”

    Daniel Obasa, a truck driver who has been using CNG for one and half years, said he spends N6,500 on CNG to Ibadan, from the N21,000 spent on diesel.

    Teotia said these testimonies were encouraging the government to do more. He said it could do more by encouraging the importation of at least 20 percent of CNG-compliant vehicles and reduce import duties on conversion kits.

    He urged a slash in the wholesale and retail price of gas by the NGC, a development, which is having a negative effect on the operational cost of the firms, such as, GGL, which markets the CNG.

  • Natural gas as alternative vehicular fuel

    With trillions of cubic metres of natural gas, the use of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) as viable fuel in Nigeria can be explored, if everything is put in place to promote the distribution of the white fuel across the country, writes ADEYINKA ADERIBIGBE

    With the approval of the Federal Government in a letter dated March 21, 2007, by President Olusegun Obasanjo, Nigeria joined the league of nations using natural gas to power their transportation needs.

    With a population that grew by almost 400 percent to 180 million between 1960 and 2016, with significant urban drift, the demand for transportation energy will increase.

    Despite these challenges, Nigeria continues to flare about 20 percent of associated gas in the oil exploration and production process. The Nigeria National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) reported that oil producers flared about 51 percent of the associated gas produced between 1990 and 2010, a volume of about 459 billion cubic metres (bcm). This volume is equivalent to 53 billion litres of gasoline, which is more than 14.5 years worth of Nigeria’s gasoline consumption.

    To address the twin challenges of gas flaring and fuel shortages, the use of compressed natural gas (CNG) as an automotive fuel was proposed in the 1990s, to harness natural gas resources, but progress has been slow.

     

    A global culture

    The idea of using natural gas as fuel for vehicles is not new globally. Italy has been using it since 1930s and Iran, Pakistan, Brazil, Italy, USA, China and Egypt have unveiled programmes aimed at significantly improving the numbers of CNG vehicles in their countries.

    With approximately 25 million natural gas vehicles around the world and consuming about 1,000 Bcf of gas annually, there has been a rapid growth of the natural gas vehicles market in the last 10 years, with a projection that more than 60 million of such vehicles would be in place by 2020.

     

    Why Gas?

    The challenges of global warming have compelled the quest for cleaner, better and safer fuels that would not be injurious to the ecosystem.

    That was why when Obasanjo issued the CNG licence to NIPCO Plc, formerly Independent Petroleum Marketing Company Limited (IPMAN), experts had thought the government was desirous of positioning to effectively utilise the untapped resources hugely available in the country.

    Sulaimon Salau, a natural gas technician, said CNG is a superior auto fuel and better than liquid fuels – petrol and diesel. According to him, replacing petrol with CNG, specifically in countries like Nigeria, blessed with over 186 tcf of natural gas, would save the country the much-needed foreign exchange.

    Yet, nine years down the line, the total number of vehicles converted by NIPCO from petrol to gas is less than 4,500, with 95 percent of them commercial vehicles. Targets set by the NGC for the first two years was 50,000.

    The General Manager of Green Gas Limited (GGL), a joint venture between Nigeria Gas Company (NGC), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), and NIPCO Plc, Mr Rajesh  Prabhu, said the government needed to do more to support the growth of the sector.

    Prabhu, whose company is the only one that has developed nine operational CNG stations, with three others about to be opened and five others under construction, said the government had not fully thrown its weight behind making natural gas available for the use of Nigerians.

    GGL started operation in Benin City, where about 4,200 vehicles run on CNG, replacing 20 million litres of petrol and saving over $9 million for the country from 2012 to 2015.

     

    The advantages

    If the Federal Government decided to replace just 20 percent of the current petrol consumption in Nigeria by switching to natural gas, Prabhu said Nigerians would not have used up to four percent of the nation’s domestic gas and less than 0.5 percent of the current gas production, thereby saving close to $2 billion yearly.

    Experts said CNG is cheaper on a mile to mile basis than petrol by as much as 50 percent and more than 80 percent compared to diesel. While the current price of PMS per litre is N145, a metric cube cost of CNG is N95 in Lagos and in Benin.

    Because it is a clean fuel which burns with low carbon deposit, natural gas leaves no lead or benzene on the engine. The lead fouling of spark plugs is also eliminated. The CNG kits and systems are sealed, which prevents any spill or evaporation. The use of natural gas eliminates the need for expensive oil refineries, improves energy choice flexibility, reduces movement of heavy tankers on roads resulting in reduced improved energy security due to local availability. Also, it reduces the importation of petroleum products, which saves  foreign exchange, stimulates local industry and create employment opportunities for the production of kits and components, such as cylinder manufacturers, conversion kits manufacturers, vehicle conversion workshops, maintenance workshops and the reduction in health hazards and improved air quality.

    Prabhu said natural gas reduces harmful vehicle emissions that pollute the atmosphere, prevents green house gas emissions, reduces global warming and is non toxic either to the soil or water. Its economic benefits, according to him, include reducing cost of running a vehicle, bi-fuel option-flexibility (as the vehicle can run on petrol and CNG with just a shift in switch on the dash board of the vehicles), reducing exhaust emissions leading to improved quality of life and reduced health cost as well as reduction in transportation cost.

    GGL in the last nine years have developed a state-of-the-art gas infrastructure in Benin, operating seven CNG stations where it serves 4000 automobiles, and three CNG kit conversion workshops which are the first of their kind in  Africa. It has also developed a 51-kilometre steel gas pipeline network which connects industries in Benin.

    The Federal Government allowed GGL to develop the CNG network on the expressways connecting Benin City to Warri, Lagos and Asaba-Onitsha, with a station at Okolovu on the Benin-Warri Expressway. Alongside three other stations ready to take off, three others at Ore, Oni Tea and Benin-Asaba Expressway are to take off between now and next year.

    The company has also opened the largest CNG station in Ibafo Ogun State along the Lagos-Benin and Ibadan expressway with an installed capacity of 200,000 scmd and can dispense over 4,000 vehicles per day.

     

    Global trend

    CNG has been adopted as transportation fuel in many countries for various reasons of which economic benefits/considerations; environmental concern/benefits, energy security, and availability of natural gas resources are the major drivers. For example, the Supreme Court of India in an effort to control vehicular emissions ordered the conversion of the city bus fleet to CNG and the USA is pursuing alternative energy for energy independence and security.

    While Iran’s crude oil reserve is the second largest globally and the country is the fourth largest producer of crude oil, over reliance on importation of petrol in satisfying domestic demand led to the adoption of CNG as transport fuel.

    In Nigeria, the need to reduce gas flaring, spiralling fuel prices and increasing environmental concerns Prabhu said, are the compelling reasons for CNG use.

    However, until 2008, when the National Domestic Gas Supply Policy and the National Domestic Gas Supply and Pricing Regulation were introduced, the focus of government was the abatement of gas flaring as seen in the provisions of the Petroleum (Drilling and Production) Regulation 1969 and the Associated Gas Re-injection Act 1979.

    Consequently, oil producers focused on gas re-injection rather than gas gathering and utilisation leading to a significant increase in the volume and percentage of associated gas re-injected, and slow adoption of gas as fuel domestically.

    As reported by the NNPC, more than 0.5 trillion cubic feet (tcf) of associated gas has been re-injected yearly since 2002. Incentives for gas exploration and production were only provided through the Nigerian Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) (Fiscal Incentives, Guarantees and Assurances) Act 1990, the Associated Gas Framework Agreement of 1992 and later through Section 39 of the Companies Income Tax Act 2007.

    Prabhu pointed out that price differential is key to the success of gas use, adding that the fastest growth is in Iran, where the price differential is the greatest, while Pakistan, having the highest saturation has CNG priced at 50% of equivalent gasoline. NGV penetration in India is less than five per cent and this could be due to the long period of subsidy for gasoline and diesel, which depressed the potential price differential. Similarly, a price gap range of six to 37 per cent between gasoline and NG in Nigeria does not appear to be compelling, as the subsidy on gasoline erodes the long-term economic benefit of CNG. Catalysts for the adoption of CNG in Nigeria are a market operator-set price per energy equivalent of a litre of gasoline, in a deliberate manner to encourage conversion, along with a dual pricing structure similar to Argentina, where credit lines cover conversion costs, to be repaid with savings from the use of CNG.

     

    High cost

    The minimum cost of conversion is N200,000 or ($1,000) and private vehicle owners are required to make a down payment of N40, 000 ($200) or 20 per cent of cost, while owners of vehicles used for commercial purposes, such as taxis, are required to make a down payment of N80,000 ($400) or 40 per cent. The loan repayment is through a price adjustment mechanism during refilling.

    Prabhu said the company was still keeping to the old rate not to de-motivate those who might want to convert their vehicles to gas. Going by the current exchange rate, the  cost of conversion, the GGL boss said, is about N500,000.

    Most users said the CNG is economical if motorists could afford the cost of conversion. Femi Adeyemi, a commercial driver who has been using a CNG commercial bus since a year ago, said it saves money and its cost effective on the long run. Outside the cost of conversion, he spends  N2,600 on gas to shuttle from Lagos to Ibadan, a distance that cost him N7,000 before. Olabisi Bakara, another commercial driver, who shuttles Lagos to Mowe, in Ogun State, would want all commercial operators to convert to gas as a cheaper alternative. For him, “CNG is a bonanza, especially for commercial motorists.”

    Oluwole Obasa, a truck driver who has been using CNG since one and half years, said he now spends N6,500 on CNG to Ibadan, from the N21,000 spent on diesel.

    Sulaiman Salawu urged the government to encourage the importation of at least 20 percent of CNG-compliant vehicles and reduce import duties of conversion kits. He said it was sad that there is no CNG content in the automotive policy launced recently by the government.

     

    Salawu also urged a slash in the wholesale and retail price of gas by the NGC, a development which is having a negative effect the operational cost of the companies like GGL which markets the CNG.

  • Firm to improve power generation through natural gas

    An indigenous producer of Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) in Nigeria, Powergas Africa, is to supply CNG to industrial and residential estates, to fill the void  in power generation, Chief Executive Officer Deepak Khilnani has said.

    Khilnani noted that his firm would supply natural gas through a virtual pipeline to industries as a cost-effective source of power generation.

    He lamented the escalating cost of production, owing to the rise in pipeline vandalism, which he said forced industries to switch to more expensive and polluting diesel-fired power generation.

    The CEO hinted that Powergas Africa pioneered the Nigerian CNG market, delivering an innovative ‘Gas on Wheels’ solution  to pipeline gas supply for customers.

    “CNG is a popular alternative fuel source to diesel globally, as it is easy and safe to transport through high-pressure skids directly to remote areas.

    “We understand the difficult market conditions for industries and national power generation, both the economic uncertainty coupled with the gas crisis. Powergas is committed to finding power and gas solutions, and will invest in new off pipeline compression and liquefaction plants to meet additional demands,” Khilnani said.

  • ‘How to realise natural gas potentials’

    ‘How to realise natural gas potentials’

    •Sector has $55b investment opportunities

    To fully tap the potentials of natural gas resource in the country, the President of Nigerian Gas Association (NGA) and Chief Executive Officer, Oando Gas & Power, Bolaji Osunsanya, said the government needs to promote investment in the sector, tackle disruptions of gas supply and partner the private sector.

    Osunsanya stated this, while addressing reporters in Lagos.

    He said the sector is being grossly under-exploited, noting that the  body has held separate sessions with the Senate and House Committees on Gas to present its view on gas policy framework required to spur sector diversification, power generation and subsequent economic growth.

    He said for a sector with over $55 billion worth of investment opportunities, the Association is extremely positive of growth in the economy and the potentials for growth in key areas such as exploration and production, processing, supply and distribution.

    Turning natural gas into a profit-making venture requires huge investments in infrastructure that address the five component areas of gas availability, affordability, deliverability, funding and legal and regulatory framework. Government and operators alike recognize that the first step is to provide a legal and regulatory framework that will enable the removal of persistent obstacles. To this end, we have scheduled a follow-up roundtable with the National Assembly later in the year, he added.

    Osunsanya said: “The demand for gas in Nigeria is estimated at about 6.6 billion standard cubic feet per day (bscf/d). This number includes about 3bscf/d for domestic utilisation (gas-to-power, industrial and commercial consumers), and about 3.6bscf/d for export to international markets via Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) and to the West African region via the West African Gas Pipeline.  Total supply into the market has been about 4.3bscf/d with most of this going to meet the export demand, particularly LNG.  This has meant that the domestic market only receives about 1.3bscf/d leaving a supply gap of 1.7bscf/d.  This supply situation has been further worsened by the supply disruptions caused by the recurring acts of sabotage on the gas pipeline infrastructure.

    “The continued government focus on gas is generating a lot of excitement and creates a unique opportunity to capitalize on the gas monetization agenda to propel the economic growth of the country. Prior to the recent reduction in gas supply, we were making steady progress, as the private sector was implementing workable solutions to counter the gas supply imbalance. Unfortunately, due to lower gas supply, marketers have been forced to adopt a more pragmatic approach by rationing the available supply.  This has had a direct effect on Industrial users who have had to scale back production and endure low capacity utilization.  In addition, the limited supply has affected power generation leading to a severe curtailment of power supply to the national grid.  This has led to increased use of more expensive alternative fuels by manufacturing industries across the country, which in many cases has resulted in downsizing to reduce overheads. Now, we require an industry-wide concerted effort to address the lingering challenges.

    “Pragmatic pricing, the ingenuity of indigenous firms to ramp up supply from varied sources to provide assurance of reliability will quickly position gas as the long term solution to our energy concerns.”

  • Firm to produce 525mmscfd of natural gas daily

    Firm to produce 525mmscfd of natural gas daily

    Independent oil giant Seplat, has begun to assemble equipment for the expansion of its Oben Phase 11 plant to increase natural gas plant to produce 525 million standard cubic feet  (mmscf/d) daily.

    Seplat, an exploration and production (E&P) company,  completed the expansion of the Oben gas plant phase last year. The expansion raised the company’s overall processing capacity from about 150mmscf/d to 300mmscf/d.

    Seplat Chairman, ABC Orjiako confirmed the expansion plan when he addressed shareholders at the firm’s annual general meeting in Lagos.

    He said: “The Oben gas plant phase II expansion is underway with additional processing modules ordered. Once installed, the additional processing modules will take gross processing capacity to an expected minimum level of 525 mmscfd.”

    Orjiako said the company’s management, despite the headwinds facing the oil and gas industry, made progress on all aspects of its strategy delivering best-in-class production and reserve growth.

    “We were able to transform our gas business, which achieved 185 per cent year-on-year growth,” he said.

    He added: “In a significant step forward for its gas business, during mid-year 2015, Seplat successfully completed and commissioned the Oben gas plant phase I expansion. This expansion saw the company’s overall gross processing capacity double to 300mmscfd.

    “Alongside the significant increase in gas production, the positive2  financial impact of Seplat’s gas business was evident as revenues from gas sales increased to  185 per cent year-on-year to $77 million.

    “Our (Seplat’s) position as Nigeria’s leading independent E&P company has been reinforced in the past 12 months during which we delivered on corporate performance target despite the oil price volatility. Our resilience is testament to the quality of our business, our strategy, our management team and staff, and our adherence to strong corporate governance policies.”

    Seplat’s Chief Executive Officer CEO, Austin Avuru said the company’s corporate governance stance and transformation initiatives helped to shield it from being heavily impacted by the global low oil price regime. He noted that the company recorded growth in oil and gas production, but lamented the renewed attacks on oil and gas facilities by the Niger Delta militants.  The attacks have led to shutting of Shell’s Forcados terminal a few times, which resulted in shut-in of Seplat’s output.

    According to Avuru, the Forcados frequent closures have affected the 2016 financial year projections.

    He said: “In 2015 we delivered on what was in our control, posting best-in-class reserves and production growth and taking our gas business across a transformational threshold with further expansion still to come. We acted quickly and decisively in response to the weak oil price environment, adjusting our work programme and cost structures.  Against a bleak industry backdrop, we remained profitable with a strong balance sheet underpinning us.

    “Our 2016 full year production expectation has been impacted by the current shut-in of the Forcados terminal. However, we are much better positioned to withstand such interruptions than in prior years. Our gas business takes on additional importance by providing a continuous revenue stream that is de-linked from the oil price. Our enlarged portfolio offers us the scope for greater diversification.

    “I would like to re-emphasise that our strong focus remains on protecting the business and managing value through effective cost reductions, optimising operations, leveraging and strengthening the balance sheet. This will strategically position the company to take advantage of opportunities that will inevitably follow this current downturn.”

    On production figures, he noted that the company’s working interest 2P (proven and probable) reserves at the end of 2015 had increased by 71 per cent year-on-year to 480mmboe, with a further 98mmboe recognised as 2C resources bringing the total reserves to 578mmboe. Recoverable resources discovered, but uncommercialised gas fields are classified as contingent resources and 2C denotes the best estimate of contingent resources.

    Avuru said average working interest production in 2015 averaged 43,372 barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd), adding that oil and condensate production accounted for 29,003 barrels of oil per day (bopd) up 20 per cent year-on-year while natural gas production was 86 mmscfd, up by 119 per cent year-on-year.

    All  the natural gas produced, he added, was supplied to the domestic market for industrial and power sector use. According to him, gross revenue for the 2015 full-year, stood at $570 million, down by 26 per cent year-on-year. Net profit stood at $67 million and cash flow from operations before movements in working capital stood at $190 million as against capital investments of $152 million. Cash at bank and net debt stood at $326 million and $573 million respectively.

    He also stated that Seplat’s senior partner in the joint venture (JV) operation, Nigerian Petroleum Development Company’s (NPDC) net receivables balance stood at $435 million, down from $463 million at the end of 2014. Further receipts post-period end reduced the net NPDC receivables balance to a current level of about $350 million, he added.

    He said the company has set a production target of between 41,000 and 48,000 boepd in the 2016 financial year and expects its capital expenditures to be around $130 million.

  • ‘Natural gas to become global fastest growing fuel ‘

    ‘Natural gas to become global fastest growing fuel ‘

    American oil giant, ExxonMobil, has predicted that natural gas will be the world’s fastest growing fuel by 2040, adding that global energy demand at the same period will grow by 45 per cent while the world’s population will increase by two billion people.

    Its General Manager, Deepwater Operations, Nigeria, Mr. Oladotun Isiaka, stated this during the presentation of ExxonMobil’s 2014 Energy Outlook Series in Lagos. He emphasised the indispensable role energy plays in the activities of human beings and the need to reinforce efforts in making it available.

    During the presentation of the company’s survey titled “The Outlook for Energy: A view to 2014,” Isiaka stated that energy remains key in global trade and the movement of people across borders adding that billions of people across the world still rely on traditional biomass energy for cooking.

    He said the essence of the survey was to give an idea or projection on what the energy sector will look like in the next 30 years. “Our world runs on energy, which is fundamental to our way of life and growing economy. While people’s needs and modern technologies continue to evolve, so too does energy landscape,” he stated.

    According to him, ExxonMobil’s energy outlook is shared globally to broaden understanding of the energy opportunities and challenges faced in the years ahead. He said the outlook is vital and important for Nigeria as an energy rich and energy dependent nation.

    He noted that as the world population approaches nine billion by 2040, the world is challenged to not just meet basic needs but also to improve the living standard of citizens. “The scale and nature of these challenges are readily apparent in ExxonMobil’s energy outlook, which is our long term view to 2040 global forecast of energy supply and demand trends. It is important to understand the link between population growth, economic progress and the amount and type of energy used around the world,” he said.

    According to him, the outlook also reveals key finding about how people use energy, how much we will need in the future and what types of fuels would meet their demands. “As global economic output more than doubles by 2040, energy demands will increase by about 45 per cent even with significant efficiency gains,” he added.

    He said that about 40 per cent of the demand would be driven by expanding commercial activity, adding that, global energy use for personal vehicles would gradually peak in the period under review and then fall, as significant fuel economy gain offsets growth in the world fleet. “Technology is enabling the safe development of once hard to produce energy resource, significantly expanding available supplies. Oil and natural gas will supply about 60 per cent of global energy demand in 2040.

    “Today, electricity generation represents the largest driver of demand for energy, though by 2040 it will account for more than half of the rise in global energy demand. Transportation demand will rise to about 40 per cent driven by expanding commercial activity. However, global energy used for personal vehicle will gradually peak and then begin to fall,” he stated.