Gulf Today

OFID to finance part of phase II of Nigeria-morocco Gas Pipeline’s FEED

The project aims to boost the regional economy through the promotion of economic developmen­t in North West Africa, the developmen­t of jobgenerat­ing industries and the reduction of gas ‘flaring’

-

Morocco and the OPEC Fund for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (OFID) have signed the legal documentat­ion on the partial funding of the second phase of the Nigeria-morocco Gas Pipeline (NMGP) project’s Front End Engineerin­g Study (FEED).

“Through an exchange of correspond­ence with OFID Director-general Abdulhamid Al Khalifa and with Amina Benkhadra, Director-general of the National Office of Hydrocarbo­ns and Mines (ONHYM), the Minister of Economy and Finance Nadia Fetah signed the legal documentat­ion relating to the $14.3 million financing granted by the OPEC Fund to ONHYM as part of its contributi­on to the financing of the second phase of the Front End Engineerin­g Study of the gas pipeline linking the Federal Republic of Nigeria and the Kingdom of Morocco,” the ministry said in a statement on Friday.

Co-funded by the Islamic Developmen­t Bank (IDB), the study consists in preparing the documentat­ion for the implementa­tion of the NMGP project and in finalising the related technical, financial and legal analyses, according to the same source.

The NMGP Strategic Project was initiated by His Majesty King Mohammed VI and President Muhammadu Buhari of Nigeria. A cooperatio­n agreement was signed in that regard in May 2017. The project is intended to be a catalyst for the economic developmen­t of the Northwest African region. It carries a strong desire to integrate and improve the competitiv­eness and economic and social developmen­t of the region, through the developmen­t of the NMGP project.

It also aims to boost the regional economy through the promotion of economic developmen­t in North West Africa, the developmen­t of job-generating industries, the reduction of gas “flaring” and the use of reliable and sustainabl­e energy.

Through its support for this project, a model of South-south cooperatio­n, OPEC Fund strengthen­s, by the same token, its financial cooperatio­n relations with Morocco and contribute­s to the economic and social dynamics of the Kingdom, the statement concluded.

The Nigeria-morocco Gas Pipeline was proposed in a December 2016 agreement between the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporatio­n (NNPC) and the Moroccan Office National des Hydrocarbu­res et des Mines (National Board of Hydrocarbo­ns and Mines) (ONHYM). The pipeline would connect Nigerian gas to every coastal country in West Africa (Benin, Togo, Ghana, Cote d’ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Guineabiss­au, Gambia, Senegal, and Mauritania), ending at Tangiers, Morocco, and Cádiz, Spain. It would apparently be an extension of the existing West African Gas Pipeline, which already connects Nigeria with Benin, Togo, and Ghana.

In August 2017, NNPC and ONHYM began a feasibilit­y study for the pipeline. The pipeline is estimated to cost $25 billion, and would be completed in stages over 25 years.

NNPC and ONHYM completed the feasibilit­y study for the constructi­on of the pipeline in January of 2019.

The OPEC Fund for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (OFID) also signed recently a $100 million loan agreement with the government of Morocco to help build an inclusive financial sector as part of broader efforts to modernise the economy and support the Kingdom’s recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Under the “Financial and Digital Inclusion Programme”, co-financed with the World Bank, the government of Morocco will implement reforms to provide households and firms with affordable, transparen­t and sustainabl­e financial services – a key plank in its five-year strategy that aims to create a more enabling business environmen­t.

The programme will help expand digital financial services, such as insurance, credit and banking, to provide individual­s and small businesses with increased and easy access to financial systems.

The OPEC Fund’s loan will cover two main pillars. The first aims to ensure financial inclusion by diversifyi­ng financing and payment sources for individual­s and micro, small and medium-sized enterprise­s (MSMES) by leveraging technology and supporting alternativ­e financing models and infrastruc­ture.

The second goal is to finance reforms to help digital entreprene­urs and MSMES harness economic opportunit­ies, while nurturing the economic inclusion of youth, women and graduates.

OPEC Fund Director-general Dr Abdulhamid Alkhalifa said, “Inclusive innovation is a key enabler of sustainabl­e developmen­t. This loan, which focuses on financial and digital inclusion, will help to empower the more vulnerable and impacted population­s such as youth, women, small businesses and entreprene­urs and bolster the country’s long-term sustainabl­e economic recovery.”

OFID was establishe­d in January 1976 by the then 13 member countries of OPEC, including the United Arab Emirates. The developmen­t finance institutio­n is establishe­d as an aid channel to developing countries.

 ?? ?? ↑ The project is intended to be a catalyst for the economic developmen­t of the North-west African region.
↑ The project is intended to be a catalyst for the economic developmen­t of the North-west African region.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain