Energy Crisis: Gas Resources to the Rescue

Energy Crisis: Gas Resources to the Rescue

To arrest the crippling energy crisis in the country, the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited has said it would use the nation’s vast gas resources as a transition fuel going by the recent global push for energy transition away from hydrocarbons.

Chief Executive Officer, NNPC, Mele Kyari, told participants at the 1st National Extractives Dialogue organised by the Nigeria Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative in Abuja that the national oil firm was currently revising its strategies on energy transition.

Advertisement

He said, “The aftermath of COP26 in Glasgow has shown that the world is committed to energy transition which the EITl and other stakeholders have also recognised.

“As we commence implementation of our revised strategy, we will use our large gas resource as transition fuel to aid this process.”

Advertisement

Kyari added, “We are committing our resources for the next decade, which is tagged the decade of gas, to explore and produce more gas relative to oil, to power Nigeria and the international community as we transit away from hydrocarbons.”

Speaking at the dialogue, the Executive Secretary, NIETI, Orji Ogbonnaya Orji, said the event was designed to provide companies, governments and civil society and development partners in the extractive industry a platform to discuss three contemporary issues.

He said the issues include contract transparency, extractive resources benefits sharing and energy transition in West Africa, with a focus on Nigeria, Ghana and Senegal.

Advertisement

“The overall goal is to enable governments, companies, civil society and communities to evaluate the energy industry and proffer evidence-based policy recommendations for the efficient and effective management of natural resource benefits and the transition from fossil fuel to a renewable energy regime with these countries as case studies,” Orji stated.

Tags:
,
No Comments

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.