Nigeria plans July start for gas deliveries to Abuja with AKK pipeline


*The construction of the Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano, AKK, gas pipeline nears completion.

Lagos — Nigeria hopes to begin delivering natural gas to the capital Abuja by July through its long-delayed Ajaokuta-Kaduna-Kano (AKK) gas pipeline

, the upstream oil regulator said, marking a key milestone for the country’s gas development plans.

“We’re hoping that by July, gas will be delivered to Abuja through the AKK gas pipeline,” a spokesperson for the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission told the regulator’s in-house magazine.

The 614-kilometre (382-mile) pipeline is designed to deliver more than 2.2 billion cubic feet of gas per day and is a core part of Nigeria’s strategy to shift its energy mix towards gas, supply power plants and industries in the north, and reduce reliance on diesel and fuel oil.

Nigeria holds Africa’s largest gas reserves, estimated at over 210 trillion cubic feet, but much of the country’s gas infrastructure remains underdeveloped, making the AKK pipeline a critical test of its gas-led growth ambitions.

The $2.8 billion project, first conceived in 2008, has missed several delivery targets, including earlier deadlines of 2023 and the final quarter of 2025.

Construction began in 2020 but was slowed by funding pressures https://www.reuters.com/article/technology/nigerias-nnpc-says-akk-gas-pipeline-70-complete-behind-target-idUSL8N36R4F3/ and engineering challenges, most notably the crossing of the River Niger. That section, widely regarded as the project’s most technically demanding, required drilling beneath the riverbed using horizontal directional drilling, often compared to a scaled-down version of the Eurotunnel.

An energy lawyer involved in the project told Reuters that work was now at an advanced stage, with the pipeline more than 90% complete.

Gas transported through the AKK pipeline will be sourced from Nigeria’s southern producing areas largely through its interconnection with the East-West Obiafu-Obrikom-Oben (OB3) gas pipeline, according to industry officials.

News  'Policy clarity driving capital back into Nigeria’s oil sector'

*Isaac Anyaogu, editing: Mark Potter – Reuters



This article was originally posted at sweetcrudereports.com

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply