Equatorial Guinea LNG plant could get Nigerian gas in the future

The Marathon-operated Equatorial Guinea LNG plant could receive natural gas from Nigeria’s offshore fields in the future as part of a new deal signed this week.

Timipre Sylva, Nigeria’s Minister of State of Petroleum Resources, and Gabriel Mbaga Obiang Lima, Minister of Mines and Hydrocarbon of Equatorial Guinea signed a memorandum of understanding during an energy event in Nigeria.

The African Energy Chamber said in a statement on Tuesday the memorandum would see Nigeria supplying gas from offshore fields to Equatorial Guinea’s LNG facility at Punta Europa.

According to AEC, the deal “marks a critical step in west Africa’s journey towards gas monetization and utilization, while ushering in a new era of regional collaboration.”

Backed by Nigeria’s ‘Decade of Gas’ initiative, which aims to transform the country into a gas economy through the development of sizeable gas-based projects, the deal integrates Nigeria’s sizeable offshore gas reserves with Equatorial Guinea’s gas processing and liquefaction infrastructure, it said.

“The chamber is urging both ministers to ensure the rapid implementation of the deal, recognizing the role this deal will play in positioning west Africa as a global gas hub,” NJ Ayuk, executive chairman of AEC said.

“Nigeria’s resources, coupled with Equatorial Guinea’s infrastructure and processing facilities, will enable gas to be commercialized, resources maximized, and new investment opportunities clarified in west Africa,” Ayuk said.

AEC did not provide any details of the memorandum.

New supplies would boost Punta Europa LNG plant

The 3.4 mtpa Equatorial Guinea LNG plant on Bioko Island has loaded over 700 tankers since 2007.

Besides operator Marathon, other shareholders in the LNG export facility include Marubeni, Mitsui & Co, and state-owned Sonagas.

Shell buys all of the volumes produced at the LNG plant under a long-term deal that ends in 2024.

New supplies from Nigeria would certainly give a boost to the facility. In 2019, Marathon and its partners signed agreements for third-party gas from the Alen project in order to extend the operational life of the liquefaction plant.

Last year, Chevron’s Noble Energy achieved first gas flow from the Alen project offshore Equatorial Guinea.

The Alen project facilitates the transport of gas from offshore production infrastructure to onshore facilities at Punta Europa, the Alba plant, and the LNG terminal.

It consists of a 70 km pipeline with a capacity of 950 million cubic feet of natural gas equivalent per day (MMcfe/d).

Most Popular

BP, partners take FID on $7 billion Tangguh UCC project

BP said in a statement on Thursday the Tangguh Ubadari, CCUS, compression project (UCC) has the potential to unlock...

GTT opens Qatar office

French LNG containment giant GTT has opened a new office in Doha, Qatar's capital and economic hub. GTT’s chairman Philippe...

Pennybacker wraps up acquisition of NFE’s LNG facility in Miami

Pennybacker announced the closing of the deal in a statement on Thursday. NFE said on July 1 that it had...

More News Like This

LNG Canada pipeline enters commercial service

Canada's TC Energy said on Tuesday CGL had executed a commercial agreement with LNG Canada and CGL customers that...

Shell boosts European LNG bunkering business with new barge

Energy giant Shell has boosted its LNG bunkering business in Europe by adding a new inland LNG bunkering barge. Türkiye’s...

Shell wins appeal against Dutch court order on carbon emissions

The Hague District Court ordered Shell in a ruling in May 2021 to reduce its CO2 emissions by 45 percent by...

Kumul gets advance payment from Chevron for PNG LNG cargoes

Kumul said in a statement it recently closed an agreement with Chevron USA (Singapore Branch) that will further Kumul’s...