Tanzania to Showcase $40B Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) Project, Gas Prospects at Invest in African Energy (IAE) 2024
The Invest in African
Energy forum in Paris will explore Tanzania’s potential to develop and export
LNG and petroleum by-products to the wider East African region
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PARIS, France, April 8,
2024/ -- With estimated recoverable gas resources of around 57 trillion cubic
feet (tcf), Tanzania will feature as part of an East African regional spotlight
at Invest in African Energy (IAE) 2024, as the country seeks partners across
various exploration, development and processing activities.
Since discovering large
volumes of offshore gas, Tanzania has initiated plans to become a major LNG
exporter. The country’s flagship Tanzania LNG project – set to process gas from
fields operated by Equinor, Shell and ExxonMobil, producing 10 million metric
tons per year – is awaiting the signing of a host government agreement that
would enable the start of development. Shell’s Blocks 1 and 4 have an estimated
16 tcf of gas in place, while Equinor’s Block 2 has yielded nine discoveries
with more than 20 tcf of estimated reserves. Last November, the governments of
Tanzania and Uganda signed an agreement to undertake a feasibility study for
the construction of a pipeline linking Tazania’s gas fields to Uganda.
Organized by Energy Capital
& Power, IAE 2024 (https://apo-opa.co/3UMOOtQ) is an exclusive forum
designed to facilitate investment between African energy markets and global
investors. Taking place May 14-15, 2024 in Paris, the event offers delegates
two days of intensive engagement with industry experts, project developers,
investors and policymakers. For more information, please visit
www.Invest-Africa-Energy.com. To sponsor or participate as a delegate, please
contact sales@energycapitalpower.com.
Tanzania has emerged as a
regional leader in LPG distribution, owing to its strategic location on the
Indian Ocean and flagship Kigamboni LPG Terminal, which imports LPG from the
Middle East and delivers it by truck to the wider region. Tanzania’s Taifa Gas
is currently leading construction of a $100-million LPG facility in northern
Zambia, in partnership with Zambia’s Delta Marimba. Last November, the country
also launched its first compressed natural gas filling station and conversion
center in Dar es Salaam, developed by TAQA Dalbit – a joint venture between
TAQA Arabia and JCG Oil & Gas.
Tanzania is expected to
launch its fifth oil and gas licensing round by June 2024, with licenses to be
awarded by December of the same year. While the details have yet to be
disclosed, 26 oil and gas blocks have been initially allocated for tender,
including 15 onshore and 11 offshore blocks. Representing the country’s first
bid round in over a decade, the licensing round aims to accelerate foreign
investment in the country’s upstream sector and showcase its highly prospective
acreage. So far, Chinese national oil company CNOOC is leading exploration in
the country – in collaboration with Tanzania Petroleum Development Corporation
– and is conducting seismic surveys in deepwater blocks located nearby gas
discoveries made by Shell, Equinor and ExxonMobil.
Distributed by APO Group on
behalf of Energy Capital & Power.