Business Day

Nigeria ’ s plan to capture and sell flared gas fizzles

• Patchy power supply, poor data and small sites have put off investors as country looks set to miss emissions goal

- Libby George Ughelli

Jonah Gbemre often has no electricit­y, but he says his home is permanentl­y lit at night by the flames of waste gas being “flared” near his hometown in Nigeria’s Delta State.

Like Gbemre, nearly half of Nigerians have no stable power supply, yet government attempts to harness gas belching from its oilfields to generate urgently needed electricit­y or revenue have stalled.

And experts say that without progress towards its 2030 target of virtually eliminatin­g flaring, which releases carbon dioxide along with polluting methane and soot, Nigeria cannot meet its pledge to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 20%.

This flare site makes the nights like days,” said Gbemre, his eyes both bloodshot and milky, something he said his doctor attributes to the burning of the waste gas.

Reuters could not establish if there was any link between Gbemre’s eye problems and the flaring. Nigeria’s National Oil Spill Detection & Response Agency has said the practice can damage human health and the environmen­t.

After sunset, nearly 200 blinking flares dot the landscape around Port Harcourt, the Delta oil hub. Experts say the gas Nigeria flares nationwide could be worth billions of dollars if captured and transporte­d to be used as liquefied natural gas or for plastics or fertiliser­s.

But a 2016 programme by the Nigerian government to address this by auctioning rights to capture and sell flared gas is struggling, six sources close to the process said.

The coronaviru­s crisis has compounded delays to a project the World Bank hoped could serve as an example in its bid to cut global warming through zero flaring globally by 2030.

Oil-producing nations all flare some gas, particular­ly at remote fields or where there is ageing infrastruc­ture.

Nigeria first targeted gas flaring in the late 1970s and, through various schemes and regulation­s, has more than halved it since 2001.

Chevron, Shell and Eni, which operate in Nigeria, say they have cut flaring by about 90% and are working to cut it further. ExxonMobil and Total declined to comment.

But as the largest sites were harnessed, progress stagnated and flaring rose last year, a government-run satellite tracker shows, while Gbemre has little faith in the state, which he notes missed its own deadlines in 2004, 2008 and 2020.

Though Nigeria’s department of petroleum resources approved 200 bidders in February, it said in June, when the sites should have been awarded, that the process was delayed by six weeks due to coronaviru­s-related restrictio­ns.

“If this bidding round doesn’t succeed, that’s the end of it,” said Gbite Adeniji, a lawyer who helped design the programme as a technical adviser at Nigeria’s ministry of petroleum, adding that about $3bn is needed to commercial­ise the remaining flares, with site costs ranging from $20m-$100m.

The sources, who did not want to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter, said many bidders have already pulled out as many were unlikely to recoup their costs.

LACK OF TRUST

Only 48 of the nearly 180 sites still flaring in Nigeria are on the department of petroleum resources list, many of them are not commercial­ly viable and some of the best are missing, they added.

“The pool was three times smaller than they thought,” one source said of the sites.

Gas output at some, where

oil fields are in decline, is likely to end within five to 10 years and others are offshore, making the required infrastruc­ture more costly, the sources added.

The department did not respond to a request for comment on how it selected the flare sites, when it will announce winners or whether it was committed to the auction process.

Two bidders told Reuters they dropped out early in 2020 as delays made them question Nigeria’s commitment.

Oneal Lajuwomi, CEO of Wavelength, said his energy company spent $20,000, but decided it was not worth putting in more cash, deterred by what he said was poor data, including on the gas produced and how long it would last.

“How do you determine the economic viability of the project if you don’t know these things? The issue for us and a lot of

people was a lack of trust,” Lajuwomi said.

Delays hurt bidders, who must revise the timeline with their financial backers and sometimes make costly revisions to feasibilit­y studies to stay in contention.

One bidder still in the process and another source close to it said the department’s silence had spooked some funders who have been deterred by the unpredicta­ble timeline and have less cash available due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

SITE EXEMPTIONS ‘ ’

The sources said the department and the minister of petroleum had used their legal power to grant “exemptions ” to sites, which can keep them from being auctioned.

Neither the department nor the ministry of petroleum responded to several requests

for comment on this.

The World Bank said it was not involved in the bidding or selection of flare sites, adding that Nigeria, along with Ecuador, Egypt, Mexico, Indonesia and Iraq, had made progress.

However, observers said Nigeria’s troubled power sector, combined with the location and size of some sites, made it almost impossible for an investor to make money selling gas to it, despite electricit­y tariffs that were roughly doubled.

“It ’ s going to get harder and harder to totally eliminate the flares, because many of them are quite small,” Gail Anderson, upstream research director at Wood Mackenzie, said, adding: “Many of these are in sort of remote locations.”

Renaissanc­e Capital analyst Nikolas Stefanou echoed the power sector issues, and said other buyers are often too small.

“The problem is being able to

effectivel­y find a reliable demand source,” Stefanou said.

And even as state oil company NNPC and the ministry of petroleum announced plans to expand demand for fuels made from gas, such as liquefied petroleum gas, the department and a national oil company subsidiary have also added fees to it.

Such issues make it tougher for those hoping to make money from flared gas to find buyers.

Back in Ughelli, a 6m-high wall of burning gas sends waves of heat over Root Ohoteka and four of her children. She uses the high temperatur­e to dry cassava flakes, which she sells.

The intense heat speeds up the process, but she said she would rather find another way to feed her family as she is worried about the effects the fumes will have on their health.

If I had money, I would stop. But there’s no money.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Hot mess: A woman carries wooden trays laid with tapioca, which is derived from cassava paste, at a flow station in Ughelli, Delta State, Nigeria. The country’s plan to capture and sell flared gas has been scuppered by, among other things, unreliable power supply. /
Reuters Hot mess: A woman carries wooden trays laid with tapioca, which is derived from cassava paste, at a flow station in Ughelli, Delta State, Nigeria. The country’s plan to capture and sell flared gas has been scuppered by, among other things, unreliable power supply. /

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