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According to Morocco, the construction of the Moroccan-Nigerian gas pipeline will benefit more than 340 million people.

This occurred at the conference in Dakar, the capital of Senegal, titled “A New Vision to Accelerate Production and Investment in the Context of Energy Transition.”

According to the Moroccan News Agency, Amina Benkhadra, the General Director of the National Office of Hydrocarbons & Mines (ONHYM) of Morocco, “This enormous project that runs through 13 countries would have a direct positive influence on more than 340 million people.”

Benkhadra shared: “All the countries that the pipeline will cross through will be included in the study and development of this project.”

She considers that the project, which is currently still in the phase of detailed engineering studies: “Will contribute to the emergence of the integrated northwest African region.”

Benkhadra added the line: “Also aims to create a competitive regional electricity market, exploit clean energy, and contribute to the industrial and economic development of all the countries it crosses.”

The Moroccan official clarified this would be through: “The development of many sectors such as agriculture, industry and mining, in addition to exporting gas to Europe. The length of the gas pipeline will be about 5,660 kilometres, and its cost has been set. It will be established in several stages to respond to the increasing need of the countries through which it will cross and Europe, during the next 25 years.”

 

In December 2016, Morocco and Nigeria agreed to implement the gas pipeline project linking the two countries during an official visit by King Mohammed VI of Morocco to Nigeria.

The pipeline will pass through Benin, Togo, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Gambia, Senegal and Mauritania.

Pirmak Zwanbun

Pirmak is a senior researcher at the African Energy Institute. He has 10 years of experience across the energy verticals of power, hydrogen, oil, gas, LNG and renewable energy.